INSIDE: PAGES AND PAGES OF COUPONS TO SAVE YOU CASH! YYoouurr NNeeiigghhbboorrhhoooodd — — YYoouurr NNeewwss®® BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260–2500 (cid:129) Brooklyn, NY (cid:129) ©2012 Serving Brownstone Brooklyn and Williamsburg AWP/14 pages (cid:129) Vol. 35, No. 36 (cid:129) Septeber 7–13, 2012 (cid:129) FREE BIKE BACKLASH Apple of ooll oo CC ii Heights walkers: Get Illegal cyclists off Promenade our eyes By Danielle Furfaro The Brooklyn Paper Rule-breaking bicyclists shatter the serenity of Brooklyn Heights’s picturesque Promenade, weaving around park-go- The essential guide to where ers and riding all over the bor- ough’s most il- an iPhone store should open lustrious side- Photo by Stefano Giovannini qitpwtbiwgdhouaoanhee cerHlyanoeknsk nrt.eteec,sligdl iyna gea rngvsPrhcy aisrcocts yo siorlnga muretntdieiferwssg iterne nhoheps aged----od ovsewit.setnda ’ stah nt eoe -npbteirdkaeen spctoerlisia csnyo-, By Stefano Giovannini Courtesy the Dermot Company BTaldbmnarhaaotyeeyeltiJBnl v s osayDB utebcub hr t—resa ooroTaftnuonooomh atkarreie elilbnted iye Bhtsld nlshSiterl nseaoees P l gboacopaa oro Fkptttao.eomule ur1yus terwpt2 nrnA ai f wdParPnapi naettyhprhpe!n’olose eeosn mr wupi ecnenu oam cctcrrhuehelides---- phAiiatAttoencye fppargcrpiH tmp ntoosob leaarCf etodo rnlh rlhcewifdyeono rlAs aiusiogmlisregfl zpt e ttmhoHippst nl ..ltlHeecaagheosrvn eaca emeit vibnx fnaie, roptt slnaosh ue n spanirrt,ds onrtt t t-os Mhodohr:pet uuessae r nw tdc rwcanit-hrrrylheaotee reecvcrasknde--t, Bikes are not allowed on the Promenade, as the sign at right shows, be- “I’m here everyday and they ride nutiae or miniature iPad rumor ctwauos-ew hoef ethleer sh figlahu ndte tnhseit ryu olef sp —ed aensdtr itahnes ,r ebsuutl tds eccakn pbuer idstasn sgaeyr otouos. many by like nobodSye’se b BusIiKnEesSs , o” nsa pida lgoen g3- rrnn eerr —Ap wplee jwusitl lw oapnet nto i tksn foiwrs tw shtoerree 182 Flatbush Ave. CC oo in Brooklyn. We contacted the Apple is famous for its glass ii tech giant and heard nothing cube — but in Brooklyn the makers back, so we called in Brook- of MacBooks could have their own A shuffl e kerfuffl e! lyn commercial real estate ex- See IPHONE on page 5 ii MM ‘Board club owners scale back plans after protest aallll By Natalie O’Neill idents — some of whom are circulating grocery-store sized watering hole, which TbtapwhfhloiaetetaTReyih rrrB ho d sdgrnyep ora ceaauoomlilcug knwePelbhky na w benpelino monlPra rus arsns Gelp o dvcoaeof lewfn rwalaldeion am rpoernserred.uosdd st pu hA toacehssir ehcnee og ldsecm pychsr amhaaApunwualfgbnlcfiieilinntetrygyg-t a—Sncthh eoitptrrn o“yeoe sbdWt weeiBl,tta ”s eiboa so oisftnandeeafrd .fdeitd dol tT t h 6thsMhhe teioem rbi ppcdpael h rtlaeAhaeantsneevinne lcec engenLldcu uoo eebvefvn e ofit anrfhnito tu e,asa me w nh lC aiueohqtiogp oguUmee ho lnncbmirvili ouonleuribngs--- wfsaileanuanscigytldlBkal li p— bbnuofalageftis ra nesasi thxaetinu npnimwdgrgede he irl o llanibrliuees vtotlnstg eirf cksMu alme iessle ralo ouryautnsos i n booidtnconinp abg, isy -enee tlcn ogeagco pn raibllnta gniiyetcre t d p gfehrFr ee r ttoec tnhhnbmio.teiirigsu ouo dhrynaptuteslireoain,ynf ’rg.eas-, Photo by Stefano Giovannini Photo by Steve Solomonson and Jonathan Schnapp say they’ll scale nearby. “It will totally overwhelm the Others spoke in favor of Royal Palms, Apple will have its choice of primo real estate if it chooses to open in Brooklyn, whether it’s in back the Florida-themed bar’s occupancy neighborhood.” saying the old folks’ game is good clean the stunning lobby of the Williamsburgh Saving Bank (top), at the perfectly located Triangle from roughly 500 to 300 after angry res- Owners f irst announced plans for the See SHUFFLE o n page 3 Sports building (left), or inside the Kings Plaza Shopping Center (right). Grocery list: Walgreens foes demand more By Natalie O’Neill list after the pharmacy, which is re- ter m onths of demonstrations from or note how much space will be ded- off the list if it wants support from The Brooklyn Paper placing a Key Food at Prospect and residents who say replacing the su- icated to food — a guarantee that the hundreds shoppers who plan to Windsor Terrace residents have 11th avenues, failed to be clear about permarket with a drugstore will cre- neighbors called “vague.” boycott the drug store unless Wal- released a list of demands for a what type of food it would offer and ate a “food desert” in Windsor Ter- A company spokesman wasn’t greens caves to their demands. Walgreens that’s set to replace the how much space it would dedicate race unless Walgreens provides fresh much more specific when The Brook- “We’ve requested more meetings neighborhood’s only supermarket to groceries. fare, or adjusts its lease to make room lyn Paper forwarded him the list of with Walgreens,” Lynch said. “This m — and they say they’ll boycott the “If Walgreens refuses to be spe- for a grocer. demands and asked for comment last list [isn’t] radical.” beth Graha dquruiArgets mttoherene t tisof. pit dofo ethsne’ tc mheecekt- tohfefi rl irset-: cnWiefieincdd sas,b otohru etT hceoormwra mctheue nyrie twsyii dlwle minltle ,”eR ts yoaauindr bnoortTisn’h gedi ertf hdianetmi taiao n“ndw osif nd “oeaw rs auonpugtelerin moefa n rfekrieegtsh,h”- Tiohu“usW rospedt aaioryne. sc utor rmenetelty t hcoe ncsoimdemriungn ivtya’rs- firsTWt hbailasgt itrsleene ’intn st Bhreerp oploahkcalerydmn a.a cKye cyh Faoino’ds Photo by Eliza 1cob0eragr,k0yae0 nds0i tgc os oaqreonu ddass rpf,era” efc aeeene rdt—a d nde gecdepoi cafmaartrptmeelde, e“t tenfo rt wsge srfiohoth--r LtmhyeeLne ptcyirhnno,gc pshwo, cshaienordcd su dtolaratughteegeddrs et nor-emarielgal.i ihelsbs aoanrgsd a chioennlsd-t fhmroueuWnisttsea ahalgronerld ede ev sgnesosgeo enl adttsaisatb, lwal.enesde,” ka a pd sreoelcim dtiieospenad fr otto-r niwhneaigvetehder sc.m ,o”“o mWsraemei d sul opsnpoeiocktyik ff eooicsfrmsfw iicaaninr adp Rl lstao owcb ethea.re”ltnk E iwnlfge- iswmnimau Bnnitlaieatyydr . pR aAr giofdrttgoeesrec t ensiru nfymr 2oset0mor0or n8eue si—in gd hte hsbmepoioarrns rc kswotimrnhaog-- Margaret de Cruz opposes a planned Wind- meat, dairy, and produce. ducted research before drafting the sell some fruit, veggies, and frozen But neighbors say there’s still tions, the drugstore promised to sell sor Terrace Walgreens. Neighbors say they penned the list of demands — which comes af- meat, but declined to cite specifics plenty more for the company to cross some fresh foods. DA: I won’t prosecute Vito Hynes says he’ll pass on going after embattled assemblyman By Danielle Furfaro Jo Anne Simon — one of the contend- The Brooklyn Paper ers to replace Lopez as party boss — District Attorney Charles Hynes says the politically connected prose- handed over the investigation of sex- cutor made the right move by calling ual harassment claims against Assem- for an outside district attorney. blyman Vito Lopez to a Staten Island “It’s very clear that there’s a lot of prosecutor because the soon-to-step- trouble here, in terms of both civil li- down Democratic party boss helped ability and criminal liability,” said Si- him get elected. d mon. “Enough has come out already r2yestcoueame0rlnna0Hfnb r.9K— e,ayI ysntinat on wsnelD gtehsdeisad el ga lne C odpBdxiot,aeep uStulsthe sesntDcehaertt motwdyssenu Doniitopcnon Iekvpe smig a olwnpanerovohntt ce — oledirsittf attD h iitataceghiig ciRrsaeaa tpct eLrinihanipn ocar hugttnpr yi bgAteem hleixzitnes----t File photo by Aaron Greenhoo tffhhtheoooieamrrnCT m tHc shadiheetylee rlolwn fm i npeAfwaoasgarsh,ctr r sieteewaneyddnn mh o tbtcosahuboo net palsrsy dnrrssi’o du hsiCscepa ne emltEvhcaineoteurehssneltdutpien i ccD rdgcisehs aee dda t amcii rNso ogcLogonmehcorr.sa”armmp.ancetaegizitdnec-, should be filed against Lopez. Vito Lopez (left) is under fire amid harassment allegations — but District cutting his budget, stripping him of The borough’s top prosecutor says Attorney Charles Hynes (right) won’t be the man investigating him. See LOPEZ o n page 2 he requested a special prosecutor after a member of the Assembly’s Commit- tee on Ethics confirmed that some of Dizzy’s employee stabbed the complaints against Lopez — w ho allegedly groped, attempted to kiss, acinun dsBs trirooineodks ltwyon ist.tha rstt saefxfeurasl l—y c htoaorgke dp ldaicse- Worker slashed outside popular Park Slope diner Martinka pproer“ltIietm di isan laalpreygp araotsiposrenisass,t”em Hetony tnc ooefsm tsmhaeiedsne ci nere aa- BThye NBraotoakllyine POap’Nereill oldG luaated-anluigphet Mpoorratelers r—eg ua l4a1r-sy ecaarl-l o—ld twheeanr irnagn at obwlaackrd tsa nPkr otospp eacntd Pjeaarnks, Photo by Paul court filing. “The results of such an assessment may trigger the need for A knife-wielding criminal stabbed “Lupe” — was cleaning outside the disappearing before police could Fun on parade further action, including the opening a beloved Dizzy’s Diner employee eatery at the corner of Ninth Street catch up. of a formal investigation and the fil- outside the popular Park Slope res- and Eighth Avenue just before 2:10 An ambulance rushed Morales to taurant — and co-workers now need am on Sept. 1 when a man slashed his Kings County Hospital, where his ing or referral of charges.” help raising cash to pay for his hos- neck, back, and chest, cops say. condition soon stabilized, said con- The 45th annual West Indian Day Parade drew big crowds on Lopez did not return calls for com- ment. pital bills. The perp — described as a 20-year- See STABBED on page 11 Labor Day, when costume-clad revelers such as Alyssa Burrisei, 21, and Jessel Medina, 26, marched down Eastern Parkway. But Brooklyn Heights district leader 2 AWP The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 Septeber 7–13, 2012 TOT LOT School of hard knocks LOCKED Troubled teens a threat at kid park, parents say City gets tough at By Natalie O’Neill Ditmas playground The Brooklyn Paper Toddlers will get an un- welcome education in the By Eli Rosenberg school of hard knocks when The Brooklyn Paper an “alternative learning The Parks Department is turning the center” for suspended high Lt. Federico Narvaez Tot Lot on Corte- school students opens next lyou Road into haven for night owls, say door to a Prospect Heights Dciaitlms alesa Pvaer kth pea preanrkts wwihdoe colpaeimn aclilt yn iogfhfit-, Gaeta tdorte lno tf,e paarr.ents of young chil- then keep the gates locked for most of the De Neighbors are scared that mpragshotnlairaovysdiCyerc bn Hnitnstlei ypyiatnegh a rogn—hercf. it efobs i vfu ctoooheinolarpatltlroite su flwn 8 opnM5erri don-bfya mgoyera l c radilnosehrrdep-w u od—ocgi ltrnld ootd g s wvsel otetoahhhcdlleeuaek ntr entr st hatu,hhec eldeeee hs rr s pm iw dLnataoaareklkyos--l ByPoaiaurnknc,g as asyoMsn osthroies ti’tsh, eh awTdoh toe L noobtu rgiinnh gD soi tf mthhaeesr Photo by Arthur trsfnsPeeawicneagerhaurihinkornelts y otg.Ps hw l-,bls ebaoh a wcotonoeeai tde hslaenl tand icbsvnd oyfeeg Urm- r osbponlmmeliwdadey iedenctr iys ahttcp,eny ircamld ilhacm Aptueiig oesvrahees--t Photo by Cassandra Giraldo ers, and vagrants . park being unlocked at night. “It’s a sweet little place Prospect Heights parents are upset that a school for suspended teens is opening next to Underhill But a recent visit to the playground with lots of running around Playground. showed that whoever is locking up the tot tinely hang out in the park and blast mu- and scampering — not a spot lot is following his own schedule: the gate sic — which Smythe says is against the to warehouse the worst stu- cial-emotional learning,” ac- san Metz, a neighbor and for- “[Class] dismissal will be behavior — they want the wasn’t closed at dusk on Aug. 29, when it park’s rules. dents in the school system,” cording to the Department of mer teacher who claims the staggered and staff will be learning center shut down should have been, but was closed to the “He was good,” she said. “Being stern said neighborhood dad Jason Education. city is “importing problems” on the perimeter as students completely. public for most of the next morning. was what people needed.” Orans, who moved nearby The former office space to the community. leave the property,” said Fein- “I’m worried about the en- The park was supposed to be open at Harris, however, has made it clear he partly because of the swing- has no kitchen or outdoor rec- Department of Education berg. “A community coordi- ergy and the tranquility of the 8 am. no plans to return to duty. set perks. reation area, which adds to spokeswoman Marge Feinberg nator will be on site available neighborhood,” said Orans, Residents were not pleased with the play “Even if they ask me again, I don’t want Up to 70 high schoolers the problem, other neigh- said the agency has met with to the community.” who doesn’t feel comfortable space’s new hours. to have nothing to do with it,” Harris told will attend class at the fa- bors say. elected officials and commu- But that’s not enough for with “any teens hanging “The park was supposed to be closed at this paper in an earlier interview. cility — which opens Sept. “If you shut these students nity leaders to plan how to some parents, who fear the around” near the tot lot, let 9 pm [last Tuesday] night,” a D itmas Park “Nobody paid me, and all I got was in- 6 — “to receive academic in all day with no space, they’re oversee the teens and commu- new school will give their alone ones “with emotional Corner blogger wrote last week. “I visited sults.” support, counseling, and so- going to get rowdy,” said Su- nicate with neighbors. kids a front-row seat to bad problems.” the park at about 10:15 pm to see the gate open with an older man sitting on a bench in the dark in the back corner of the park. Futons on the Fulton Mall That’s not exactly a scene that evokes ter- ror, but the fact remains, the park was sup- posed to be closed.” Parks Department officials say they are scrambling to find someone to open and Raymour & Flanigan will open new store in Downtown close the park on a regular basis. “We are looking at all other options By Danielle Furfaro surrounding neighborhoods to open retail locations on the shopping street’s transition — including volunteerism — to continue this effort,” said Parks Department spokes- The Brooklyn Paper makes the market a great fit,” the Fulton Mall in the com- away from small retailers and woman Meghan Lalor. Furniture retailer Raymour & Milnamow said. ing months. toward national and interna- So far, about 11 residents have volun- Flanigan will open a store in the In recent years, the Fulton Meanwhile, popular local tional chains. teered to open and close the tot lot, but Fulton Mall — continuing the Mall has undergone a rapid chains including Shake Shack “More and more people are residents assisting the city’s effort to keep suburban mall-ification of the transformation from a street and Brooklyn Industries have calling Downtown Brooklyn the park safe say more volunteers will be busy shopping corridor. of sneaker shops, discount jew- set up shop on the west end home,” said Tucker Reed, pres- needed. The seller of sofas and side elry sellers, and wig stores to of the street, near Borough ident of Downtown Brooklyn “The Parks Department’s promise to tables, which operates stores a corridor lined with national Hall. Partnership. brands such as Aeropostale, Neighborhood boosters “This continued transition close the gate at night is a short-term fix throughout the Northeast, will the Gap, and Starbucks. claim that the residents of into a 24/7 neighborhood is a only, but one that can tide us over until set up shop alongside a newly Swedish fashion chain H&M the new high-rises that have driving force behind this vast we find a long-term solution,” said one opened Express and a Planet Fit- and discount department store sprouted in Downtown over diversification of retail that we neighbor, who would only identify her- ness outpost on the second floor of Century 21 are both planning the past few years helped spark are seeing today,” Reed said. self as Christina. 490 Fulton St. in February. Volunteers will meet to coordinate Scott Milnamow, senior vice a daily schedule in the next two weeks, president of real estate for the Christina said. upstate-based home furnishings LOPEZ the party boss. ough’s Democratic party, Lo- Yet some hoped for the return of Har- retailer, said Raymour & Flan- Before this latest round pez will remain on the ticket ris, the rule-bound octogenarian who igan has long eyed the Down- of alleged harassment be- for his Assembly seat and will was dismissed from service a fter parents town shopping strip. Continued from page 1 came public, the Assembly run unopposed in a Sept. 13 complained that he would curse at unruly “We have been looking in the his coveted position as chair- secretly paid out $103,000 of primary. youngsters and sometimes argued with res- Downtown Brooklyn market for man of the Housing Commit- taxpayer money to two pre- Many of the lawmaker’s ri- idents who said he was closing the gate do the right location for a couple of tee, and eliminating the perks vious Lopez staffers who ac- vals — and even some of his too early. Giral years with Fulton Mall as an area he gained through his senior- cused the powerful politician allies — have called for him to “If kids were riding bikes he would tell dra high on our list,” said Milnamow, ity after staffers complained of misconduct. step down, including Assem- thhee mwo tou lsdto tpe,l la nthde imf o ltdoe lre kaivdes, ”w esareid in p tahreernet, Cassan wtwhoo oseth eemr pBlrooyoekr alylrne alodcya otipoenrsa t—es aatbtoemutp itneddi ksicsrseetsi,o unnsw inancltuedd iandg- sheTllheed poaurtt y$ 3b2o,0ss0 0h iomuts eolff bMlya nShpaetatkaenr) ,S ah leolndgonti mSielv Leor (pDez- Maria Smythe. By one in Coney Island and another vances, and mandated love let- pocket to settle those claims. backer who authorized the se- Without Harris, the tot lot has become Furniture retailer Raymour & Flanigan plans to open a in Marine Park. ters they were forced to write Though he is giving up his cret settlement of the earlier a destination for young adults who rou- store on the Fulton Mall next year. “The pedestrian traffic and to express their gratitude to influential post atop the bor- harassment claims. (cid:75)(cid:63)(cid:60)(cid:23)(cid:57)(cid:73)(cid:70)(cid:70)(cid:66)(cid:67)(cid:80)(cid:69)(cid:23)(cid:57)(cid:56)(cid:58)(cid:66)(cid:74)(cid:75)(cid:70)(cid:73)(cid:80) (cid:57)(cid:73)(cid:70)(cid:76)(cid:62)(cid:63)(cid:75)(cid:23)(cid:75)(cid:70)(cid:23)(cid:80)(cid:70)(cid:76)(cid:23)(cid:57)(cid:80)(cid:23) (cid:58)(cid:60)(cid:67)(cid:60)(cid:57)(cid:73)(cid:56)(cid:75)(cid:64)(cid:69)(cid:62)(cid:23)(cid:75)(cid:63)(cid:60)(cid:23)(cid:69)(cid:60)(cid:64)(cid:62)(cid:63)(cid:57)(cid:70)(cid:73)(cid:63)(cid:70)(cid:70)(cid:59)(cid:74)(cid:23)(cid:70)(cid:61)(cid:23)(cid:75)(cid:63)(cid:60)(cid:23)(cid:57)(cid:70)(cid:73)(cid:70)(cid:76)(cid:62)(cid:63)(cid:23)(cid:70)(cid:61)(cid:23)(cid:66)(cid:64)(cid:69)(cid:62)(cid:74) Park Slope Family hub went from glamorous to gritty and back again By Natalie O’Neill ilies buying farmland across the The Brooklyn Paper borough’s more inland neighbor- Park Slope is famous for its hoods. brownstone buildings, child- Over time, that farmland gave friendly bars, and cute bou- way to Park Slope’s street grid tiques, but the bucolic commu- and its signature brownstone ar- nity is more than a family-centric, chitecture. park-side oasis — the neighbor- As the area became more pop- hood’s leafy streets and stately ulated, the state commissioned homes actually tell the story of master park designers Frederick gentrification, historic preserva- Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux tion, urban redevelopment, and to plan the neighborhood’s crown adapting perspectives towards jewel: Prospect Park. parenting. Not long after, President Gro- The charming community ver Cleveland unveiled the tow- that’s considered New York City’s ering Soldiers and Sailors Arch, most “livable” neighborhood has complete with horses and angels swung like a pendulum from posh at the northern foot of the 585- to impoverished and back again acre park. over its lifetime. “The area became a place for In fact, some of the area’s institutions — the Botanic Gar- early history is more bloody den and the public library — and than beautiful. it really began to flourish along In 1776, as the Revolutionary the park,” said Brooklyn histo- War roared, Gen. George Wash- rian Francis Morrone. ington fled to what is now Park Those cultural attractions Slope to escape British forces. — not to mention the mansions A gruesome battle — dubbed along Montgomery Place, Pros- the Battle of Brooklyn — then pect Park West, and the neigh- played out on what’s now a co- borhood’s other grand streets — lonial-themed playground across lured wealthy families to buy in from the Old Stone House on Fifth Park Slope by the 1920s. Avenue. But after the Great Depres- Washington and his men man- sion, many residents were ready aged a heroic retreat, fleeing from to give up on urban living. the borough while a company Some Park Slope dwellers be- of soldiers from Maryland held gan looking for property else- osiftfiP otahnre kf rB oSrmliots pr.ue rsatla trot eudr biatsn tarfatne-r Giovannini wIlesalhavenirndeg a— bned ih nlie naadrf eyba rDso iwstumncsahtso a Pnsea Lsr koth n—agt tvt1ha8ince0T e w0a hesnaem.rd n,e weBrwghreo etdonr a kbrneelysltiiwnat beliielnnen k ft M hesrepar ayner ahskreaelrtdy-- Photo by Stefano lbhmaeotacmeBdoryee mf saete h alp laen u i sd1nsl 9uhtco4m rt io0dm, s cfi,sueo Pr.lne laT voprhefak reai Str b c.tla hiotnepyd e tsoh ohneoaenddn- a wave of settlement, with fam- CURB APPEAL: It’s hard to believe there was a time when Park Slope’s beautiful buildings weren’t hot commodities on the real estate market. undesirable brownstone homes 09/ 28/ 12 Septeber 7–13, 2012 The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 AWP 3 Neighbors: Feast was burden LOCAL LUMINARIES Residents: 18th Ave. fest marred by violence, intoxication, urination How a sonogram By Will Bredderman sit on my stoop and get into wasn’t as long,” Morena The Brooklyn Paper fights.” said. “Eleven days is just Drunken teens attending Neighbors said fights and too much.” saved a young life the resurrected Santa Rosalia illegal activity witnessed at Others complained about Festival left 18th Avenue in the 18th Avenue Feast bled fistfights, rowdy behavior, shambles, according to res- out onto the side streets be- and loud noises, but said it idents who hope the once- fore the event came to a close was all part of living near by Celia Weintrob cancelled end-of-summer tra- on Sept. 2, leaving residents 18th Avenue. dition doesn’t return to the with sights they would have “There’s fights over here, neighborhood. rather not seen. and they’re screaming and If you’ve ever seen a sonogram per- patient went into cardiac arrest a cou- turTn hoof uthsaen 1d1s- dchayee freesdti tvhael r—e- in “tIh es aswtr epeeto polne Tuhriunrastdinagy yelling at night,” said resi- dent Laura Tiezeman. “I felt formed on an pregnant woman, you ple of times while in the CAT lab, so a which organizers cancelled night,” said Joanella Bells, kind of lost last year with- may have wondered what else the de- delay could have caused a very differ- last year during a permit dis- who lives just off the festival, out it.” vice can do. ent outcome.” pute with the city. But those which stretched from 68th to The answer is simple and dramatic: Ultrasound uses sound waves to cre- who live closest to the action 75th streets. “It’s filthy and Community Board 11 of- iptsotqteoiflu dnas iWteNaydch vtekieehnhedlw eygseP t np oralbYie e rabvaadkos yel1 irksi aSD6kze.tl -ertoryMbid.pc eGa seeealhe lmtrh,he-r osaoe owhrlrsdddgepai oe siscwtn tCona calelHhysl,a a i oswdrrph siedsacpepeeso iaad wtlrroat uhtwa,lm s.:sw h h sIeaihehnnltodee--t agbvammitntlai eeaeea ni wunkmass al etmbitp fnsreera ogiot,snv htvro—hgieeaun e--etng xd pa umicntiiuAcntsoer eod1l fl.oMaf6fe pt-reh yhtsehiee gotasihds -ris—ds-uteo’esf sl ipda nooi nrtr iotdoarn -- Photo by Steve Solomonson smgmkscaalaiayaadir“di rrbstmIer h a eRseegdnd. i1 der ec8,b ivh tntayhheakn rarAddi dtnrv s putgeMahann werukouk eerpnie snFnodon egleb aia crrn,msa aetiw gwg wadehnhlai,stoyd”s-, ta1cbydh8 eeiobteltariBlrh osreoo l endArsyol ga,t lvm Iobyaste uan bnttwltiheiui zml aeaaleen ybn oirF- tostsd’Aes stldoa i omsoonnsfhtv’ne e hette’x rodewtrit r c.p b—”a anyiencnee ctkti a thgat rurhenha’pyes--- fcaahtsuimebnaciroddv“iboau eEanotltdshn otvt ahhcasten aetler yryis e1td,y .hos”8 pttfe thfhho Cie6 cniAy2iBnda vnhg 1let dca1o no v uPmaedern np ieFywsolcea ttidreia nrniisnecsctts--ttt, had shortness of breath, a fast heart rate, liable, and survives thanks to Caroline Starsira Siracusa points out trash 18th nothing to stop the youths. just want it to be abridged. manager Marnee Elias-Pa- weak blood pressure, and oxygen levels low-cost a sonogram. Avenue feast-goers left behind. “Then after it gets dark, they “I wouldn’t mind it if it via said. that were way to low. diagnostic But the quick-thinking doctor ordered tool. an ultrasound of the patient’s chest, and the Today, City: Some sinkholes not our bad problem was there before his eyes: she was point-of-care ultrasound technology is having a heart attack. Within minutes, chief used extensively in the emergency de- cardiologist Dr. Terrence Sacchi was on partment, the intensive care unit, and the scene, and the patient’s life was saved other areas at Methodist where it can — thanks to a sonogram that pointed out provide fast, accurate answers in acute By Will Bredderman street belong to us,” Depart- Street opening, as well as the something atypical in a teenager. situations. The Brooklyn Paper ment of Environmental Pro- loss of parking spots as crews “Rarely do you think ‘heart attack’ “To immediately see whether some- Homeowners are responsi- tection Deputy Commissioner work on the hole, were frus- with a 16 year old,” said Chiricolo, who one clutching her side has a ruptured ap- ble for repairing the sinkholes Jim Roberts said, pointing to a trated by the news and de- pointed out that the symptoms could pendix, or shortness of breath indicates that are forming throughout busted sewage conduit coming manded that the city do a have been caused by a blood clot in the a collapsed lung, or a patient with chest lio—tuinfej nt nuA“ahgtTrne sniiy ,desds p s ooo tt.inrhhnc oee aaa glnd pClryiyaaaA tmgniiTenun ns omstatcsh’vbsiaise esnl dw ri stf vaoeiittab.fhu ll ouaethtt aihiebnoe lsanerts , em isantihsdittnee aoru nfpnt ceiaanes-l TgpcfraahraerieACcnea t eunhtiBo ldlairstnas orti aoftooW slrcfkuoy aeltiu ydhnitnnn eoasd t r atrP ogitovameuiebvpln el el,edi,i s”svr gt . teh sthivsaehIof.e ie hsd y ee hpoCa aeuruhnrtb’, siv rpawleii osc echiogrnaeslotol r-lit .on oaf aa-tf Boohhfvteaffaooaru fttlo yiaeehlctd nsReyhi d a oosdipl dtsmpisirpgep eewewseene,s,sh t ied a snttoroceh g lacp asit ronaohtre eycrene dsos ctmsni nh ani—eonuaaginitesg ntpcesmoh i,tdw b p caap oeiabnnrtsr-iyydy-- Photo by Steve Solomonson obCaSttoe euto abrrttClewrel oooipeonnefclt eagni kaasnc s uilhe a tnRRp rowtk huiompdhaecaagyo edtprei l tioo—e fp Born.ne foo , w99 mubc22lhure nntietv cdhRdwah e oSSr si dbst9t rraej3aeeurnrreetsddesttt bdahntHasaeieultspr t“ycdugtpWo eorrBemraocn eonku jm aadco.ngreebiddat s t ti eiemhn1nre0a,v”fo ct r e esnhat anahiasit vitdilorsrii trCm urtwioclonaentimgn ulmml rBm ueeono.nnurobe---t a surgical room,” said Chiricolo. “This (718) 260–4503. that should be maintained This massive sinkhole nearly swallowed a car on said it is unrelated to the work Still, some welcomed Rob- by property holders. 79th Street, but the city says some of the Ridge’s being done on the 93rd Street erts’ optimistic outlook. Department of Environ- smaller depressions aren’t its fault. sinkhole, which he says won’t “They were talking about mental Protection officials be fixed, filled in, and sealed finishing up around Christ- are taking full responsibil- idents say has left a cloud of for more than two-thirds of until the end of the month. mas,” said CB10 chairwoman ity for the 70-foot sinkhole noxious-smelling sewer gas the smaller street openings Residents and civic lead- Joanne Seminara. “They’ve near the corner of 93rd Street over the community — but in Bay Ridge . ers o verwhelmed by the foul been very responsive to our and Ridge Boulevard that res- claim they are not to blame “Not all the holes in the stench coming from the 93rd concerns.” perts agree. that cyclists pose a danger — Tony Scarselli, owner but some say they aren’t in- SHUFFLE of Brooklyn Heights Bike tentionally disregarding the Shoppe on Atlantic Avenue, rules. said cyclists who ride on the The signs that warn bikers to Continued from page 1 Promenade are doing so for stay away — which also outline fun that will bring neighbors together. recreation, not commuting a number of other prohibited Even though bikes are not allowed on the promenade, they are a regular convenience. activities such as skateboard- Owners nevertheless withdrew their CftBiimoxnteut BirnIerou ooeKkdnl y ftnrho HemEe i pgphiactsgtS reue rs1iedseqntu e saawsecsiae ctlRlneoikd onc.wersgnaea tasnyshs. sa etcresye iy cnbel otis su—atnsy d sbr iuthdotee hh oeah npfae pstanher’nest twpahnoaadp“tl kAumtwlhsaoe barrreiyietk by ieai n kirr neietdh rNmisen w efogwui riletn luY tcpurroelrear.nakc st eoCes st ih ttionye psmtB“haTereeiooh“ dnbopIe idk klrSseelew cy ’t-sahfnor rria unBidsetloe erndb li ddrlinciealg’,yyta e cpswb Plaoaiihadtnskhrotv ek sit in o isertn neexhrsec pietdaoetlrorheamebr da,ye”a-t. i—nfcidnryeogecn “mn alatTe trna ,ehJt dnshnoe dawe’h st i c dinasgpoel nkMnauaersiltntdi caogigK crbfh euo eaab sfl i haofomg-rar ls.lheromydaov s paotihonlrdl o dg,r rymeo eboagsiiuds--- lBtibrtihaaqyoenc,uIay gknror ie dwrtnn-h gesol6eiux uc tmbtocle dmmo nes msaosioetcnun m aa ntbtlnihdieimt d.- atbp eepbaer,p oecA lcfokiolocf brt autheethl reideoat c snbvCla,uuo iotidbthlme’ dses, hi nmsnce aacgu iypo snai amainntcrdgye-- Photo by Shanna Gillette Rob Rosenstein, who spends Community Board 2 dis- rent bikes, we are probably bike there — it’s like an over- can barely see them,” McK- will continue to work with neighbors. Who says senior citizen sports his afternoons reading on the trict manager Rob Perris has going to see more of this,” sized terrace for the neighbor- aig said. “Maybe if they were “We see it as a place that can be a com- aren’t cool? Not these shuffle- Promenade. “There’s no con- received calls about cyclists on he said. hood.” bigger, people would pay at- munity center for all ages,” she said. board-loving entrepreneurs. cern for anyone else.” the Promenade — and he fears Neighborhood cycling ex- Promenade regulars claim tention.” into “rooming houses,” where 40- plus people could live. MEET THE NEIGHBORS “Things really deteriorated physically,” Morrone said. It didn’t help that banks re- fused give out mortgage loans These five entertainment icons feel for buildings they considered dilapidated. Then everything changed. at home in Park Slope In the 1960s, legendary preser- vationist and Park Slope resident Everett Ortner led a movement to (cid:129) Indie movie darling Mag- save the crumbling beauties, ral- lying activists to convince banks gie Gyllenhaal traded the to give out loans. headaches of renting in His efforts inspired a wave Manhattan for a Park Slope of so-called “brownstone pio- brownstone in 2009 in neers,” who toiled away repair- order to — what else? — ing the insides and outsides of start a family. their homes — and rebuilding the fabric of the frayed neigh- becoSarfoleo mr1“TdphA9eh eto6 ha plog0otead rst mrn o,.yt”ew ooo iMugv fi nehntohmgbtroe orpe osarenho nobtoce pohio lahseedlael rupaimednped.iddhai seinPtca aebovnrveak---l Photo by Stefano Giovannini (cid:129)e dBtvheeieenclro ginydv-oeeemniddgaet hnt“ hkobS ePn ot saowaretrhwhtr oTtisoclro eklhee d edkS g”’—otse a wlsewl aaenaaxne dirydnnt-. clave, where residents became deeply invested in their neigh- STREET SCENES: (Above) borhood’s cultural, artistic, and Park Slope has emerged as political identity — an identity one of Brooklyn’s culinary best defined by the still-thriv- capitals, with eateries such ing the Park Slope Food Co-op as Va Beh on Dean Street on Union Street. gaining a following among (cid:129) “Boardwalk Empire” star By the late 1980s, Park Slope neighborhood residents Steve Buscemi loves his was home to a burgeoning mid- and gourmands across the Park Slope community so dle class — but it was still rough city. (Left) Bustling Fifth Av- much that he recently led a around the edges. enue is lined with cafes, res- rally to save a firehouse in “It was dangerous back then taurants, and boutiques. the neighborhood. — the drug traffic was horrific,” longtime resident Irene LoRe. “It has been on an upward curve since the 1990s.” As the economy strengthened, place to raise a family,” said Pe- so did the neighborhood. ter Bray of the Park Slope Civic (cid:129) Jonathan Safran Foer, Park Slope attracted a grow- Council. arguably the greatest ing gay community and artists By the 2000s even well-known author of his genera- flocked to the neighborhood actors and writers — such as Mag- tion, penned “Extreme- thanks to its comparatively low gie Gyllenhaal, Jonathan Safran ly Loud & Incredibly costs, its brownstone architec- Foer, and Steve Buscemi — called Close” in his Park Slope ture, its open-minded ethos, and Park Slope home. pad. its diversity. Manhattan-centric New York Legendary crooner Elliott Magazine went so far as to crown Smith even penned his acclaimed Park Slope as the city’s most “liv- album “X.O.” while sipping whis- able” neighborhood. key in the venerable old man bar And current residents say it’s Osdcinooo’gouwCA“ nnaPon tttaner otaryimnptks’uos- efn drSbra’oeglsemots.esc ptidth leoe,i x ewraieassnas m mdrtadap rocuslgver rcui eaomiadntfib tecei lsh nsywc a. aenteshngn aee-t Photo by Stefano Giovannini a—thksianiiogni n di“whdn Io Mtciqof thr uhfboea aeadsrol a rairiuoubt ntwyntlo uie efipa nt.uprihballco aelnheacu iatpetta ef lktbyacoilc teds ucet scrar .oteelomle — thlbsio vi anmienta’,de”s- (cid:129)JfcSlnoaoo ehCvmmhioeognowsmmh uH”bpees oooa drfcrpkdoihaiipgarnon leeghs oaam i dsafnru naa Mdhnndn e aw c a—“ cectrD siat t ahle—liserl y home. NEXT WEEK, WE’LL CELEBRATE THE HISTORY OF WILLIAMSBURG barclayscenter.com facebook.com/barclayscenter @barclayscenter 4 AWP The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 Septeber 7–13, 2012 Mom’s wallet and glasses stolen while she shops gency exit at PS 77 between nius,” the name of a Brooklyn- Heights woman’s apartment to get it back, the two strug- refused to leave. The man then 78TH PRECINCT Fifth and Sixth avenues, then based pop band — gone. POLICE BLOTTER on 72nd Street sometime be- gled and the tough kicked him threw the keys at one of the Park Slope walked into a stairway, caus- Suba-smash tween Sept. 1 and 2 — but in the head and neck. officers, striking him on the A creep stole a wallet from ing an alarm to flash in the only took two pairs of her ear- A 19-year-old man was ar- right arm, reported police. The A jerk jacked some fancy a mom on 11th Street on Aug. main office. electronics from a car on Car- Find more online every Wednesday at ings, cops say. rested for the crime. man then tried to resist arrest, 3co0p.Tsh seh 3e5 -wyeaas r-sohlodp vpicintigm n teoaldr wbuittT hdhoaeum t patgaekerpdin tgthh eae ndnyo otthhr.ien gf l—ed rtoolldlT Shctoer pees3 t8 ho-eny epAaaurr-kgoe.l d2d 7 h.visi cnteimw BrooklynPaper.com/blotter laenfdtT 1hh3eetr hv h iacovtmiemneu tbeoesld taw pt e2oe:l3inc0 e1 p s2mhthe, OmafCnf owipchs oea rtrrhee sayte ssda ays 2tah6r-uyewelat kre-eoydlds Ppwoialtihcd ea s ssbaaiudul,t ra. ngdl weas charged Seventh Avenue with her son Indie popped gray Subaru near Fifth Ave- came back at 7 pm, and discov- gerous dames approached her, and came home at 12:30 am at an officer on Meserole Av- at 6:30 pm when they walked A crook stole a car parked nue at 2 am, then came back ered the air conditioner in his punched her in the face, and the next day to find her bed- enue on Aug. 24. Someone came in through away from his stroller for two on President Street sometime five hours later and discovered window busted — and his gui- hurled her to the ground. room window jimmied open Police say the officer was a woman’s unlocked bed- minutes. That was enough time between Aug. 28 and Aug. 31 the rear window broken — and tar, Xbox and iPod gone. Another then began to pull and her dresser drawers scat- between Lorimer Street and room window in her Java for the thief to grab her wallet — and some musical equip- an iPod, speakers, and a nav- Rotten worker away her purse. When the tered about the room. But when Manhattan Avenue at 1:30 am Street apartment on Aug. 19 athned sptrreoslclerirp.tion glasses inside mcoepTnsth hleee 3f 3tp -iaynreskaiedrd-eo thldhi esv ivrceetdihm i1c t9loe9l.1d Sigaatiodn ssyostenmg gone. of Abu ctkhsie ffr osmto lae ftohoodu sdaenlidvs- vrwiiboclmtei mtawn of, oswoumhgohe t fh lbaeaddc wwk,ia thttch ahe te htdie rrid-t sgtihocene dec, hm tehciesks eoindng lty ow iseteereme wtsw hsoha tep wanioarss- wstaitrhte odt haergr cuoinpgs wwihthen th theme m anand S—e ean BdL lOeftT wTEithR hoenr ipPaadg aen 5d School sneak Honda Accord near Fourth A perp swiped a guitar from ery service on Butler Street all go down. of earrings. on Aug. 29. Affordable Family Dentistry Someone broke into a pub- Avenue at noon on Aug. 28, an apartment on Sixth Street A manager at the service Gone in a flash — Will Bredderman lic school on Park Place on then came back three days later on Aug. 29. near Fourth Avenue, told cops A crook swiped a woman’s in modern pleasant surroundings Aug. 30. and discovered his car — along The 24-year-old victim 94TH PRECINCT he caught an employee on cam- pricey camera inside a 13th A witness told cops a with a snare drum, a keyboard, told cops he left his home era taking $1,460 after a de- Avenue pizzeria on Sept. 1, Greenpoint–Northside State of the Art Sterilization (autoclave) man popped open an emer- and sign reading “Team Ge- near Fourth Avenue at 7 am, livery at 5:40 pm. according to cops. Hat stolen Emergencies treated promptly — Natalie O’Neill The victim was at Frank’s Special care for children & anxious patients Pizza between 75th and 76th A bully offering a compli- WE NOW ACCEPT OXFORD (cid:46)(cid:80)(cid:79)(cid:85)(cid:73)(cid:77)(cid:90)(cid:1)(cid:41)(cid:70)(cid:66)(cid:77)(cid:85)(cid:73)(cid:1)(cid:53)(cid:74)(cid:81)(cid:84)(cid:1) 68TH PRECINCT streets at 8 pm when she set ment about another man’s style • Tooth Bleaching (whitening) her $2,300 Canon — with a apparently thought it looked • Cosmetic Dentistry, Porcelain Facings & Inlays, Bonding Bay Ridge–Dyker Heights better on him when he stole a Crowns & Bridges (Capping) (cid:71)(cid:83)(cid:80)(cid:78)(cid:1)(cid:47)(cid:70)(cid:88)(cid:1)(cid:58)(cid:80)(cid:83)(cid:76)(cid:1)(cid:46)(cid:70)(cid:85)(cid:73)(cid:80)(cid:69)(cid:74)(cid:84)(cid:85)(cid:1)(cid:41)(cid:80)(cid:84)(cid:81)(cid:74)(cid:85)(cid:66)(cid:77) Rough night $2,000 lens attached and a hat on Lorimer Street on Aug. • Painless, Non-Surgical Gum Treatment $30 memory card inside — • Root Canal • Extractions • Dentures • Cleanings A group of thugs jumped on her table as she got up to 24, police who arrested the sus- • Implant Dentistry • Fillings (tooth colored) pect claim. • Stereo headphones • Analgesia (Sweet air) (cid:55)(cid:34)(cid:51)(cid:42)(cid:36)(cid:48)(cid:52)(cid:38)(cid:1)(cid:55)(cid:38)(cid:42)(cid:47)(cid:52)(cid:27)(cid:1)(cid:1) aw masa hne aodni nFgif htho mAvee fnroume aas b haer ggoett raenaodtyh etor lselaicvee. aWt 8h:3e0n psmhe, A man told police he was Dr. Jeffrey M. Kramer on Aug. 27, cops say. she realized her photo equip- sitting on a bench near Nas- 544 Court Street, Carroll Gardens The victim was near 92nd ment was gone. sau Avenue at 1 am when the 624-5554 (cid:85) 624-7055 (cid:34)(cid:1)(cid:51)(cid:70)(cid:66)(cid:77)(cid:1)(cid:49)(cid:66)(cid:74)(cid:79)(cid:1)(cid:74)(cid:79)(cid:1)(cid:85)(cid:73)(cid:70)(cid:1)(cid:45)(cid:70)(cid:72)(cid:1) Street at 3 am after leaving a Pinched ear bully told him he had a “nice Convenient Office Hours & Ample Parking bar when the perps assaulted hat,” and then pulled it off of and insurance plans accommodated A burglar trashed a Dyker his head. When the man tried him and took his wallet with by Elie Semaan, M.D., Attending Physician in Vascular Surgery his cash and cards inside — a New York Methodist Hospital $205 value. Police are check- TWO WAYS TO LOVE ing the surveillance tapes at Varicose veins — the swollen, twisted, most common diagnostic technique uses the bar for evidence. and sometimes painful blood vessels ultrasound technology to see how blood Big score that have filled with an abnormal moves through the veins. Other studies A fiend ransacked a 76th collection of blood — are often thought that may be necessary include computed Street apartment on Aug. 29 of as a cosmetic annoyance. Commonly tomography (CT), magnetic resonance — taking off with $28,400 found in the legs (though they can develop imaging (MRI), and angiography. Even if in swag. in almost any part of the body), varicose a patient is found to have vein disease, the The victim said he left his veins occur in roughly half of people over condition can often be addressed without house between 10th and 11th the age of fifty, and are three times more surgery. Non-surgical treatment options avenues at 11:15 am and came likely to occur in women than in men. 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e(cid:42) (cid:15)vd(cid:35)a (cid:1)nt(cid:5)o’s(cid:8) (cid:1)(cid:50)(cid:6)(cid:17)(cid:7)(cid:2)(cid:1)(cid:6)(cid:4)(cid:4)(cid:5)(cid:5)(cid:10)(cid:1)(cid:51)(cid:1)(cid:14)(cid:25)(cid:8)(cid:13)(cid:13)(cid:1)(cid:3) Natwutdfa—aapihrmpnnnuageieon ybdddsyge f hn, aila orsni ofdi ec sotennntteetegaehfageeevdfenateer t wie, upseostrr sroii rsilebntetysone,ryer.eev ”gsn aet V otil th——sirrefni taas sreBi l nt nc r oooov beklrloys gnoP,u anrp one ewr.icgeohbmbsio.te rT,hh oneoo a d“wsn eawwridtsh- of vein disease and can worsen over time the patient is awake, and rarely require an Femme fatales world’s best Cyclones it several times a without proper treatment. In more serious overnight hospital stay. coverage in a convenient package. It’s one-stop day — to stay on top of the greatest city in the A trio of hellions assaulted a cases, visible signs include ulcers on the Recent advances in technology and shopping with excitement on every page. world: Brooklyn. woman on 66th Street in Dyker skin near the ankles, and browning of the medicine have been a boon to all those Heights on Aug. 29 — throw- skin in that area as well. who are living with varicose veins, but it is ing her to the ground and at- The good news is that varicose veins are up to patients to take advantage of those tempting to steal her purse. THE BROOKLYN PAPER and BrooklynPaper.com highly treatable, and diagnostic proce- options. Chances are that they will be able The victim told cops she dures that explore the extent of the dam- to move on with their lives without miss- between 10th and 11th ave- Your place for a full dose of Brooklyn! age are almost always non-invasive. 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Y0071_13_15391_I 8/22/2012 Septeber 7–13, 2012 The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 AWP 5 BLOTTER… a man in his 20s started yell- Bag stolen The suspect brandished the Avenue and Fulton Street, in- Prosecutors charged the old suspect, but a female ac- ing at her to give him money. tool at around 11 pm and went vestigators claim. teen with petit larceny and complice believed to have Someone stole a back- When she said no, the man said pack containing two phones to work on two flat-screen tele- The 46-year-old suspect criminal possession of sto- been involved remains on Continued from page 4 The 70-year-old woman “You stupid b----,” grabbed and cash out of a cement truck visions inside the residence at faces charges of petit larceny len property. the loose. some jewelry. told police she was near Moore her cane out of her hand, and parked on Debevoise Street the corner of Tillary Street, ac- and criminal possession of sto- Cards swiped Ashes to bashes The victim told police that Street at 3 pm on her way home hit her repeatedly on the hand, on Aug. 30. cording to documents from the len property, according to doc- Two thieves broke into a A pugilist flicked a lit ciga- a thief entered her apartment when the men grabbed her police said. The victim told police the District Attorney’s office. uments from the District At- Washington Avenue residence rette at a passerby on Carlton between Franklin Street and purse and then knocked her Bully jacks bike items were taken while he Prosecutors charged the torney’s office. and stole a man’s credit cards Avenue on Aug. 28 — then Manhattan Avenue sometime down. A 14-year-old boy told po- was making a delivery be- woman with menacing, crimi- and IDs on July 21. beat him up, according to in- bfiertew eesecnap 9e a, man adn sdt onloeo hne vr iiaP haedr, notLM huuecarktn.iw lyh, itlhee, twheo mthuang sw gaost luipce a tth kant iafneoptohienrt baonyd hsetoldle h himis tHwuemenb oGldrta Shtarmee tA. venue and nsmiaoeln nm to,i fsa acm hwioeenfa,g pc oroitnmh, eainrn acdlo hpuoanrstasses.ss-- F8or8t TGHre ePnRe–ECClinItNonC HTill homThe eb ebtuwregelanr Ls agfoaty ienttteo atnhde vesTtihgea tpoerrsp. met the victim at emyoengdla bssreasc,e eleatr.rings, and dia- aewyeagyl awssitehs t, haen pdu $r5s ei,n a c paasihr. o f bAiukTge .h o2en8 b .Fo lyu ssahiidn gh eA wvaesn wuea lokn- 84T—H D PaRniEelCleI NFuCrfTaro NoPo lcicae ncu dffeod a woman BuCollp sp ceunffende ad teen ac- Gammree naetnnsd ea g sa rwvaebenbllue aedss sa ea wvt eaarlraloel udt ncoodcnu 7-- 3ngu aanem pa nubdne cFthwuilnetegon nh iSAmttrl eianen ttt hiacen dAfa bvceee--, Senior caned ing his bike near Tompkins Av- accused of grabbing a Bud- cused of stealing Red Bull taining a driver’s license, two according to the DA. 90TH PRECINCT A young thug tried to get enue at 2:30 pm when the young Brooklyn Heights– weiser and walking out of a from a Fulton Street bodega debit cards, an American Ex- The victim needed stitches Southside–Bushwick an elderly woman to give him thug put a knife to his throat and DUMBO–Boerum Hill– Flatbush Avenue Extension on Aug. 27. press card, a green card, ac- above his eye. Senior tackle mowonn ecyan aen wd hbeena st hhee rre wfuistehd h oenr sgaoiidn, g“ Gtoi vceu mt yeo yuoru trh briokaet o.”r I’m HammDoewrn totiwmn e cpoaynivnegn oienn Aceu gs.t 2o8re. without legTedhley 1 6sn-yaetcahr-eodld t shues penecetr galy- cnoeyrd’si nogf ftioc eth.e District Attor- oldP osuliscpee acrtr,e wstehdo ah 2a9s -ybeeaern- A pair of jerks attacked an Humboldt Street on Sept. 2. The victim handed over the Cops arrested a 32-year-old The alleged thief entered drink at 1:27 pm and attempted Someone later racked up charged with assault, menac- old woman on Leonard Street The 71-year-old woman Mongoose black BMX with woman for smashing two TVs the 7-Eleven at around 9 pm, to flee from the store, which charges on one of the miss- ing, harassment, and weapons on Aug. 28 — knocking her told police that she was near rear pegs and the thief rode off with a hammer inside a Gold picked up a can of beer, and ex- is between St. Felix Street and ing credit cards. possession. down for a $3 purse. Maujer Street at 10 am when down Thompkins Avenue. Street apartment on Aug. 29. ited the shop between Dekalb Fort Green Place. Police arrested a 42-year- — Ben Muessig iPHONE… 1 Hanson Pl. vate events — boasts a stun- Avenue at N. Fourth Street. ning interior that could wow Could the arrival of a high- Apple isn’t afraid of his- shoppers with little modifica- end supermarket could pave tory — the iPhone inventors Continued from page 1 of the brand’s shops, but Ap- abided by strict city regula- tion. That’s a good thing, be- the way for a high-end com- glass triangular prism. The ple has been known to com- tions to set up shop inside the cause little modification is al- puter store? If Apple really three-sided plot that houses promise — and the location landmarked interior of Man- lowed due to its historic status. wants the skinny jean-set, the Triangle Sporting Goods is up boasts high visibility, plenty hattan’s Grand Central Termi- If Apple could make the space tech titan could snag a primo for sale, and with a full rebuild of foot traffic, and lots of ea- nal. So what’s stopping Ap- work, 1 Hanson Pl. could eas- storefront one block away at the space just steps from the ger laptop-toting shoppers in ple from doing the same thing ily attract neighborhood shop- the corner of N. Third Street soon-to-open Barclays Center nearby Park Slope, Prospect in the famous Williamsburgh pers, commuters, arena-goers, that used to be home to the and borough’s biggest transit Heights, Boerum Hill, and SavTihneg csa Bvearnnko?u s former bank aflnodc kth teo cthuelt nuereadrb cyr oBwrodosk tlhyant BaTgehle S vtoarcea.n t space has al- hub could make for an iconic Fort Greene. — which is the wintertime Academy of Music. ready been the center of much home for the borough’s first Havens’s take: “That home of the Brooklyn Flea and Havens’s take: “Land- speculation — including ru- Apple store. The footprint is would be a great location, if an occasional venue for pri- marks doesn’t want the in- mors of a possible J. Crew a bit small compared to many it’s big enough.” terior to change. There are takeover. Sources familiar the teller cages and the ta- with the building tell us it a bles — none of that could be brand with an even higher pro- + PRESENT T HTEHE touched.” file is eying the space. But if BUILDING S SEERRVVICIEC E Apple’s first Kings County WORKERS OOFF T THEHE YYEEAARR Empire Stores shop is in Williamsburg, it could be tough to draw all of DUMBO offers almost those Mac fans who live in everything that Apple co- Brownstone Brooklyn. verts: an iconic retail space, Havens’s take: “I don’t Nominate a posh neighborhood, and a think it covers enough of techy community. The build- Brooklyn. That space would ers of Brooklyn Bridge Park work great if they want to do are seeking tenants for the more than one store, which I your favorite offi ce cleaner, historic Empire Stores — a hope they do.” Civil War-era warehouse with a prime location alongside the security offi cer or life saver! waterfront tourist attraction. Kings Plaza Apple would need to do lots Shopping Mall of work to convert the build- The Kings Plaza Shopping ing into one of its glitzy re- Center is about as far from the Energy creation. tail outposts. gentrified bustle of Brown- But upon opening, there stone Brooklyn and Williams- Recycling programs. would be plenty of foot-traf- burg as possible — but a re- fic from well-heeled tourists, Closed-loop solutions. tail space doesn’t need blog customers from the web busi- buzz to make business sense. nesses that work in the neigh- Those are just a few of the innovations we’re delivering for An Apple in Mill Basin is a borhood, and DUMBO res- long shot, but the mall is al- customers and communities alike. We live in a world where GO TO: WWW.BSW-AWARDS.COM TO NOMINATE ihdigenhtess t preanytisn.g Brooklyn’s ready a home to major na- things can no longer go to waste. Havens’s take: “The in- tional retailers including a Best Buy, H&M, Aldo, and That’s why Waste Management is working to get the most Nomination Deadline is terior is not practical. And that location can’t be open Express. And Apple doesn’t from our existing resources. It’s good for business and the Thursday, September 13th, 2012. 24-hours.” shy away for malls. environment. Scoff all you want, but shoppers in suburban Long 247 Bedford Ave. Island currently enjoy four For more information contact Liza Connor at Williamsburg is the global Apple stores, while Brook- capital of cool — and its al- lynites continue taking the 212.268.8600; [email protected] or ready bustling business strip train to Manhattan when- Jessica Ramos at 212.388.3782; [email protected] is poised to become an even ever they need to get to the bigger commercial corridor Genius Bar. once a planned Whole Foods Havens’s take: “It’s hard opens up shop on Bedford to imagine that.” Get more home for your money. 2.75% 2.96% 15-year fixed-rate mortgage APR 2.25% 2.86% 5/1 adjustable-rate mortgage APR You’ll run out of room before you run out of options. Andersen® windows come in styles, shapes and sizes to fi t any purpose and Great rates on new or refinance mortgages. every personality. 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Examples: 15-Year Fixed-Rate Loan: A 2.959% APR loan for $200,000 will have 179 payments of $1,357.24 and one payment of $1,357.83. 5/1 ARM (Adjustable-Rate Mortgage): A 2.856% APR loan for $200,000 will have 60 payments of $764.49 and, based on current interest Store Hours: Mon, Tue, Fri, 7:30am to 5pm rates, 299 payments of $831.24 and one payment of $832.43. After 60 months, the interest rate will be adjusted annually. & Thurs, 7:30am to 7pm, These examples do not include payments for taxes and insurance, which will cause the monthly payment obligation to be greater. © 2012 Amalgamated Bank. All rights reserved. Open on Saturday from 10am to 2pm 6 AWP The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 Septeber 7–13, 2012 BROUGHT TO YOU BY MUNICIPAL CREDIT UNION EYE OF THE STORM THE WORLD’S BEST CYCLONES COVERAGE Wild week ends with Cyclones clinching playoff spot Cyclones 5 The Hilario gave up just four hits — an RBI single to Baby Sox first baseman Jake Davies left Sox off the board over the next Yankees 1 and walked one, while strik- first baseman Jake Davies in runners on the corners, caus- four innings, but when Clones Aug. 31 at MCU Park Ride ing out seven batters. the top of the fourth — in a ing Donnelly to send in closer skipper Rich Donnelly sent in Big bats pushed the Clones The Clones took an early strong showing that came to Tyler Vanderheiden — who reliever Matthew Bowman, past the hated Staten Island lead and made it stick after a close one out shy of a com- wrapped things up. things went awry. 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Cyclones 4 gle to shortstop Phillip Evans, first. Shortstop Mike Miller homer deep to left. tersonin in the sixth. vid Wynn and closer Beck back doubles off Coney re- Yanks starter Andrew Lowell Spinners 1 another single to first base- whacked a line drive to cen- The Clones ended the The Clones came back in Wheeler kept their archene- liever Matt Koch, prompting Benak blanked the Clones for Sept. 3 at MCU Park man Jayce Boyd, and yet an- ter off usually solid Coney miserable night leading the the third after left fielder Jorge mies from another run. Rich Donnelly to pull him for five innings while surrender- Scrappy offense and a other single to Plawecki to starter Gabriel Ynoa — who NY–Penn League wild card Rivero hit a frozen rope to right Cyclones 3 Tyler Vanderheiden. But the ing only a single hit and two great outing by hurler Luis bring Ponce home. then committed an error that race by just half a game, af- for a double. Baby Bombers Yankees 2 righty struggled, giving up walks. Brooklyn threatened Cessa let Brooklyn’s boys Brooklyn racked up two let second baseman Mookie ter the second-place Batavia starter Derek Varnadore then Sept. 1 at Richmond County an RBI single to left fielder in the sixth after reliever Pe- of summer take the first of more runs in the eighth and Betts reach base. Ynow forced Muckdogs’ faceoff against the pitched himself into a jam by Bank Ballpark Danny Lopez — then letting dro Feliciano gave up back-to- three games against the Low- Lowell attempted to rally in designated hitter Deven Mar- Jamestown Jammers was walking right fielder Maikis A strong showing by Cy- right fielder Danny Oh drive back singles to shortstop Phil- ell Spinners in MCU Park — the ninth, as second baseman rero to ground out, but the postponed. But the follow- De La Cruz and plunking cen- clones starter Julian Hilario in Duran. lip Evans and catcher Kevin putting the Clones one game Mike Miller opened the inning play brought Miller home. ing day, the Muckdogs lost the ter fielder Brandon Nimmo to and a save by closer John Donnelly yanked Van- Plawecki with two away, but ahead in the wild card race with a line drive double to cen- Jake Davies then dropped a first game of a season-ending load the bases. A sac fly by Mincone propelled the team derheiden for Mincone, who first baseman Jayce Boyd flied with two left to play. ter. Cessa then fanned one hit- fly ball into left field for an doubleheader, giving Brook- Ponce let Rivero cross the past the loathed Yankees in forced a pop out for his sixth out to center. Cessa gave up just six ter and forced another into a RBI single. lyn the wild card berth. plate, evening the score. a key win. save of the season. Cyclones hurler Rainy hits, one walk, and one run ground out. But a single from The righty kept the Baby — Will Bredderman Home sweet home just got Don’t wait another day. 30 YEAR a little sweeter. FIXED RATE Get an MCU mortgage today. 4.000% Loan specialists to guide you through the Rate* loan process 4.170% First time homebuyers education program Refi nancing and Home Equity APR* Loans available Call 212 -238-3521 or visit nymcu.org to apply today. * 360 monthly payments of $4.77 per $1,000 borrowed. This APR (Annual Percentage Rate) and For more monthly payment term apply when you are fi nancing up to 80% of the purchase price with 2 points. information, If you are fi nancing more than 80%, the APR and monthly payment term will be higher due to PMI (Private Mortgage Insurance). Rates in effect as of 08/30/2012. Rates and terms may change scan without notice. MCU fi nances 1-4 family homes, Condos and Co-Ops located in New York. Loans the code. and interest rates are subject to credit approval. FNMA limits apply. Membership is required. Federally insured by NCUA (cid:2)Checking (cid:2)Auto Loans (cid:2)Money Market (cid:2)Credit Cards (cid:2)CDs (cid:2)Mortgages (cid:2)IRAs (cid:2)Personal Loans (cid:2)Online Banking (cid:2)Convenient ATMs Smartphones on AT&T . Here in New York City. 99 $ 99 New 2-yr agreement with qualifying voice and data plans required. HTC ONE™ X Take high-resolution photos right from video 1.866.MOBILITY | ATT.COM/NETWORK | VISIT A STORE Get all the coverage you need! Replace, support, and locate your device with AT&T Mobile Protection Pack. Limited 4G LTE availability in select markets. LTE is a trademark of ETSI. Claim based on a comparison of average download speeds of Android™ smartphones operating on the 4G LTE networks of U.S. national carriers. 4G speeds not available everywhere. Limited-time offer. HTC One X requires a new 2-yr wireless agreement with voice (min $39.99/mo.) and monthly data plans (min $20/mo.). Subject to Wireless Customer Agrmt. Credit approval req’d. Activ fee $36/line. Geographic, usage, and other terms, conditions, and restrictions apply and may result in svc termination. Coverage and svcs not avail everywhere. Taxes and other charges apply. Data (att.com/dataplans): If usage exceeds your monthly data allowance, you will automatically be charged overage for additional data provided. Early Termination Fee (att.com/equipmentETF): After 30 days, ETF up to $325. Restocking fee up to $35. Other Monthly Charges: Line may include a Regulatory Cost Recovery Charge (up to $1.25), a gross receipts surcharge, federal and state universal svc charges, and fees and charges for other gov’t assessments. These are not taxes or gov’t req’d charges. Visit a store or att.com/wireless to learn more about wireless devices and services from AT&T. For more information, please visit att.com/mobileprotectionpack, ask a sales representative, or call 1-866-MOBILITY. Screen images simulated. ©2012 AT&T Intellectual Property. Service provided by AT&T Mobility. All rights reserved. AT&T and the AT&T logo are trademarks of AT&T Intellectual Property. All other marks contained herein are the property of their respective owners. I N S I D E D I N I N G | PE R FO R M I N G ARTS | N IG HTLI FE | BOO KS | CI N E MA HEROES Art-vengers! Why play video games on your TV when you can play it on a skyscraper? The DUMBO Arts Festival will have plenty of free art on display, but no work is likely to match the interactive “Superhero” display for sheer grandiosity, which gives festival-goers the O Arts Festival osSoefpu rapp nbeo rehrmatiusmatnnosi r ataiyccn r twodos asssroh tehaoheroo fltuai lkcsaeee- MB using a video game con- DU sole add-on. Photo by vcaemr“sIeito ruans teoos f t aut rhsnoe u thpKeei dEn-emucp-t pire Stores facade into a playing field for two superheroes,” said Frank Riley, executive pro- ducer of the DUMBO Arts Festival. “Essen- tially, the concept is pretty great.” (718) 260-2500 The Brooklyn Paper’s essential guide to the Borough of Kings Septeber 7–13, 2012 Players will be able to fly, shrink, grow in size, climb, and project beams of light across the face of one of Main Street’s oldest build- ings as they live out their super-powered fan- tasies using technology. Superhero at DUMBO Arts Festival (DUMBO betw. the Brooklyn and Manhat- tan bridges, including the waterfront. www. dumboartsfestival.com). Sept. 28–30, Fri. 6 pm–9pm, Sat. 12 pm–9 pm, Sun. 12 pm–6 pm. Free. — Colin Mixson BEER Slurpshow Sword swallowing meets beer guzzling. The five-hour debauch of unlimited beer-tast- ing, indie bands, and good old-fashioned freaks, known as Freaktoberfest, is bringing its side- show spirit to Greenwood Heights. True to its roots, Freaktoberfest’s master of ceremonies will be the ever-popular per- former Donny Vomit, who — besides driv- ing a six-inch nail into Giovannini hoshvisoe wrnsa easeca ttlhs c efea aavrtirutayrye —odf a s wti dthiele-l Photo by Stefano fbfeoenrsrit“tmneiErgvetv iartie yinfrn.rty eit ehryneeeds abtsrie noIeg frt- rtlpyohe vetr oi-bn ega curtoifwudl sa,”n dV obmizaitr srea itdo, promising two lovely lady dancers, a juggler, Modeling citizens and an appearance by Evil Hate Monkey. The bizarre beer fest will also showcase nu- merous native New York libations, including special creations from Brooklyn Brewery, Six Point, and Kelso — plus entries from Dogfish and Victory breweries. Freaktoberfest at Greenwood Park (555 7th Ave. at 19th Street, in Greenwood Heights, freaktoberfest.eventbrite.com). Sept. 15, 12–5 pm. $60. — Will Bredderman Williamsburg Fashion Weekend nixes runway for the stage MUSIC By Hannah Palmer Egan its namesake neighborhood. FASHION — much of it handcrafted in Brooklyn by for The Brooklyn Paper “We like performance-based shows— the designers themselves. Many collections It’s his land it makes [it] memorable for the audience use recycled or salvaged fabrics and non- In a neighborhood known for its some- and gives designers a chance to not just Williamsburg Fashion Weekend at toxic dyes and chemicals. the Windmill Studios [287 Kent Ave. times-schizophrenic style sensibilities, show fashion but show another facet of betw. S. First and S. Second streets, “It’s very do-it-yourself,” Tron said. a carnival fashion show is just right. who they are.” (718) 384–7300, williamsburgfashion- They must be doing something right. Across the East River, New York Fashion And while a good chunk of the show will weekend.com]. Sept. 14, 15, 8 pm. $15 This season, Bushwick artists declared Sept. Happy 100th birthday, Woody Guthrie. Week (NYFW) might have pitched a tent be art pieces not meant for the store rack, at advance, $20. 22 and 23 “Bushwick Fashion Weekend.” The legendary and long-passed folk trou- in Manhattan’s Lincoln Center, but trapeze this fashion show the line between the un- That event will center around a “Bushwick badour’s centennial is this year and some folk artists, stilt-walkers, and smoky cabaret per- wearable and the ready-to-wear is blurred, “We want to start a revolution in the fash- Zoo,” an animal-themed costume parade lovers are throwing a huge concert and party formances are strutting their stuff, wear- from a Hellraiser-inspired collection from ion industry,” Arbit said, because, “When- beginning at the Morgan L stop and wind- for the singer in Brooklyn, fitting for the bor- ing this season’s hottest, in the Williams- Mark Tauriello, to a beastly series from ever you buy a blouse at H&M for $29.95, ing through the neighborhood to the Liv- ough that was the ram- burg Fashion Weekend (WFW). Russian-born designer Uta Bekaia. someone on the other side of the world is ing Gallery, on Flushing. bling singer’s residence “We don’t do runways,” said Arthur Ar- Aside from enjoyable show, WFW is paying for that blouse with their blood.” Tron commented, “You know you’re do- of choice. bit, the artist, designer, and master tailor on a serious mission to shake up the fash- So, WFW features designers who em- ing something right if people start copying “Woody Guthrie who founded the smaller, weirder fashion ion world, pushing to the center stage the brace ethical, transparent business prac- you. You can’t patent a good idea. We’ll spent most his years in celebration taking place twice annually in politics of looking pretty. tices, and the clothing is sweatshop-free take it as a compliment, I guess.” Brooklyn — when he was sitting down,” said Robert Santelli, the ex- Muddy waters mffurounTmldth i c-oeml bmejaieilncnliutios-pvn f .eo-sdusoneldllsa aarl roeS n mugp atehdree- Photo by AP ecwthceaaulsett boiwvnroeae ut dpilodliarn ebc.ce et “tmooIrf oc ohstftoh ioetmhsreee- waterway — including plants portant for him, it would be Brooklyn.” and industrial scraps — and The show at Brooklyn College will feature feature a sturdy underwater folk stand-bys like his Woody’s son Arlo, Judy camera, lights, and a wire- Collins, Steve Earle, and Wilco’s Billy Bragg. Tour Newton Creek with toy boats less video feed to an on-shore It’s all part of a conscious effort to pay tribute monitor. to Guthrie’s time in Coney Island, where Guth- During a test run, one boat rie lived for a time on Mermaid Avenue in par- By Natalie O’Neill Project creators say the foot boats while they watch brought back a plastic treasure ticular, say the show’s organizers. The Brooklyn Paper goal is to get folks to engage real-time video of the ves- in its propeller. “His favorite place was Nathan’s,” said his with a body of water that func- sels voyaging first through oil “In some places the sewage daughter Nora Guthrie. “Whenever my mom Adler Tomyo bsot aptosl alurete tda kbiantgh otunb t hine tai olangso moonr.e like a landfill than sfliincaklsly, t hleesns -hfuilmthayn w waatsetre., and ogvoettrefnlo swtu icsk s,o” tKheicnks binogaetsr shaaivde. wusa dnotewdn t oth cele baona trhdew haolku saen, dm dyi sdaapdp ewaoru wldit tha kues Photo by Bess ionpgeA rtaah tfteeela edcmei mtt y ooi.fnf a irr-etbimsotaost tises i ucnno hlneigtarhsohlly-- ic“nIott- ei“cnrIrvtae’cisat teta ows w rt ihNtaheya p ttthhuoeab g nlwie cKta tpetoeen eros,x”ippn lslgeoa etrirdoe. eylynenavT rPi hruwoebn olvminca geAthnureteta lClyN oopaarrpltoiohtjic eoBacnltr’y sop lodatkeisc--t aW“Itt a’NNslk ere eww[aPtltaoloyidww vgnnie s C iCbArreleeve.ee”knk A uNerm aptauadrseat fsthoperaW cabeneo athohcodahuyt or w naGa to suN utohatu.t”rthi etah neC’sree. ,Hn bteee inlninkgie aadlb tlahete t ofBe wreolaionlkkg l oyonnf Into the thick of it: Artists Sarah Nelson Wright and Laura toxic Newton Creek, complete the past, present and future of sign competition for its pro- Dupont Street in Green- College [Walt Whitman Theater, 2900 Cam- Chipley (shown pictured with her baby Tula Gendron) will with submerged video cameras Newtown Creek.” posal to document conditions point, newtowncreekarma- pus Rd. at Hillel Place in Midwood. (718) launch boats into the Newton Creek in an interactive proj- — for the curious kid in you — Kensinger said visitors get of the polluted river as the fed- da.org] Sept. 8, 9, 15, 22, 29, 951–4500, woody100.com] Sept. 22, 7:30 ect to get a close-up of the contaminated waterway. to record what lies below. to become pilots of the three- eral government begins its 30. Free. pm. $35 and up. — Eli Rosenberg WE’RE BUYING! RERUN FOLLOW The best-kept GASTROPUB THEATER TOP DOLLAR PAID ON THE SPOT US ON High Holy Days Secret TWITTER Inspiring Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur services are open to all at no charge. But please let us know you’re coming. (cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:39)(cid:79)(cid:76)(cid:68)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:51)(cid:73)(cid:76)(cid:86)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:48)(cid:76)(cid:65)(cid:84)(cid:73)(cid:78)(cid:85)(cid:77)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:36)(cid:73)(cid:65)(cid:77)(cid:79)(cid:78)(cid:68)(cid:83)(cid:0) (cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:35)(cid:79)(cid:73)(cid:78)(cid:83)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:37)(cid:83)(cid:84)(cid:65)(cid:84)(cid:69)(cid:0)(cid:42)(cid:69)(cid:87)(cid:69)(cid:76)(cid:82)(cid:89) Call or email: 718-638-7600 [email protected] Also ask about our exciting Children’s Services It’s so easy to convert your unwanted gold Union jewelry and other gold items into quick cash. Call us toady for and appointment or come in Temple and we will buy your items on the spot. JEWELS BY SATNICK WWW. A Reform Jewish 187 State St. (between Court & Boerum) Congregation RERUNTHEATER.COM 718-852-1421 Open Tues-Fri 10am-6:30pm, Sat 11am-5pm 17 Eastern Parkway twitter.com/ License #1272660 Brooklyn_Paper Brooklyn, NY 11238 8 AWP The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 Septeber 7–13, 2012 WHERE TO EDITORS’ PICKS FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY September 7 September 8 September 9 September 10 September 11 Russian Herc locker shore Known as “La furia di Ercole” in its original Open studio event Italian release, “The “Go Brooklyn” has Fury of Hercules” is a exactly two artists in Brighton Beach, both comically dubbed from the former Soviet movie from 1961, fea- Music to Union, but you can see Drifters turing the muscle- Pol preppin’ plenty more post- bound Brad Harris, in move to Soviet creativity at “Art If the business side of a long line of muscle- Picture Mitt Romney Two musicians from on Brighton,” at the the art world is get- bound men who with electrodes moni- far off lands are com- NY Aquarium, as well ting you down, then played the son of toring his heart rate as ing to the Well, one as a large scale instal- visit one of the many Zeus, and brilliant clipboard wielding of the newest indus- lation made up of 36 galleries participating French song-writer men in lab coats scrib- trial performance and window air condition- in the free-from-fund- Serge Gainsbourg as ble notes — this elec- party spaces featur- ers — installed on the ing “citydrift.” It’s a a conniving villain tion won’t be left to ing plenty of room to beach, and turned on. Bushwick event pre- with a terrible hair- chance. Washington dance and plenty of senting an alternative cut. It’s campy, correspondent Sasha 7 pm at NY Aquarium drinks to imbibe. The (Surf Avenue and West to “normative” con- 16mm projection fun. Issenberg’s new book prolific Omar Souley- Eighth Street, wwww. cepts of “going to the “The Victory Lab” 9 pm at Crown Victoria man from Syria, and ArtOnBrighton.org). $15. museum” to see art [60 S. Second St. betw. pulls back the curtain Bubu music trail- See gobrooklynart.org — asking gallery Kent and Wythe avenues, on the science of win- for open studios. blazer Janka Nabay goers to drift through (917) 719–6072]. Free. ning an election, giv- from Sierra Leone the neighborhood, ing insights into the will have you moving without worrying tactics and strategies your feet to their about what is or isn’t used to make regular people (really, they beats all night long. art. Enjoy the perfor- are!) look presidential. mances, panels, and 6 pm at the Well [272 Meserole St. between featured artists. 7 pm at powerHouse Waterbury Street and Arena [37 Main St., at Bushwick Place, (347) 9 pm, Sept. 5–10. See Water Street, (718) 666– Clear Healthy Skin 338–3612, thewellbrook- www.citydrift.org for par- 3049, powerhousearena. lyn.com]. $15. ticipating galleries. com]. Free. isn’t it time you call? NINE DAYS IN BROOKLYN Medical Services we accept: GHI, HIP, 1199, AETNA, CIGNA, UNITED, OXFORD, HORIZON, HEALTHNET, MEDICARE, BLUE CROSS, MAGNACARE, AMERICHOICE, ELDERPLAN FRI, SEPT. 7 Cosmetic Services Botox, Restylane, REAfrDomIN hGe:r K naetwie bRoooipkh, e“ Iwn iPllr raeisaed of Juvederm, Radiesse, Sculptra, Laser Hair Removal, Messy Lives: Essays.” free. 7:00 p.m. BookCourt [163 Court St. between Laser Tattoo Removal, Laser Vein Removal, Torn Pacifi c and Dean streets in Cobble Find lots more listings online at Earlobe Repair, Keloid Surgery… Hill, (718) 875–3677], www.book- BrooklynPaper.com/Events court.org. Coolsculpting Trim Fat, No Needles, No Downtime ART EXHIBIT FOCUSED AROUND and Peter Kaminky present “The NEED: Safety is a group exhibition Mile End Cookbook.” 7:00 p.m. about asking, “What do I need?” BookCourt [163 Court St. between 254 Prospect Park West, Park Slope and “Where can I fi nd it?” These Pacifi c and Dean streets in Cobble questions are not absolved, but the 136 West 17th Street, NYC works show the process of navi- Hill, (718) 875–3677], www.book- court.org. gating through excess, want and desire to fi nd safety, security and READING: Martin Amis reads from Javier Zelaya, MD 718.832.3313 self-fulfi llment. Free. 12–6:00pm. his book “Lionel Asbo: State of Eng- LiloVeve Gallery [457 Grand St. in land.” 7:00 p.m. BookCourt [163 Verna Broughton, PA Williamsburg, (805) 390–8243], Court St. between Pacifi c and Dean cassandratayloryoung.com/ streets in Cobble Hill, (718) 875– post/28355956310. 3677], www.bookcourt.org. FOLK MUSIC CONCERT: Hip hop- TASTE WILLIAMSBURG GREEN- meets-harmonica at this concert POINT: The outdoor celebration featuring the band Folkadelics. benefi ts the building of the North- $8–$10. 6 pm. Brooklyn Bowl [61 side Town Hall with live music, and Wythe Ave. in Williamsburg, (718) more. outdoor celebration of North 963–3369], www.brooklynbowl. Brooklyn’s local fl avor to benefi t com. the building of the Northside Town Hall. $40. 1–6 pm. Citi-Storage [5 READING: Mary Jo Bang is coming North 11th in Williamsburg, (212) to Brooklyn to launch her newest 242–0002], https://tastewg.word- book, “Inferno,” a contemporary press.com. reimagining of Dante’s classic. Free. 7:30 pm. APS HQ [323 Dean St. UNDERGROUND WORKS AT SYCA- (718) 858–8067], www.apublics- MORE: Check out some unconven- pace.org. tional jazz on Sundays in Septem- TFIHLEa$wWwapM 1bAoiib,ycc2o pTlckk“.au0cEk )FnS,to0oR O kwtqr/f:aen$ fRuwKr t1 arB eaawo5 n(veIt2.rDd.a0yr t0cii h 0DnlIP7hare.g yvE abSb8 liiNalnetr:ue0,ar’g s scrr0Pah erhacptL wf SevarrAmeteitebc.yNn.sa ak bphTusrEseeeomehtTtatsnsew”e .r a i:rnBne .bBot uelBsrersn giuah n .sn-g hd - Photo by Steve Solomonson REAbCaPmnaeDoodrrrIk.r Nt eW,$e Mb1(Gl3yer0:4oos. O T7tuo8m)h k: RN32eliydn04 Fns. ,0 po.t bc–eSmreo5rt t Em.8rG wSo5P.ryea0 ecTed]e,a.n swnm iSe1nwot M0rDwraeio.t tsf[mm1yo1cras1da s8- prices. Free. 8 pm. Narrows Botani- Open studio: Midwood artist Robin Antar will show her stone Book Group presents Amy Sohn, cal Gardens [Shore Rd. at 70t Street author of “Motherland.” free. 7:30 sculptures for Brooklyn Museums’s “Go Brooklyn.” in Bay Ridge, (718) 748–4810]. p.m. Greenlight Bookstore [686 Ful- ton St. between S. Elliott Place and accessories. Free. 10 am to noon. religious, social and cultural hap- S. Portland Avenue in Fort Greene, SAT, SEPT. 8 Old Stone House (Fifth St. and Fourth pening in the heart of Brooklyn. The (718) 246–0200], greenlightbook- THEATER, POE AND MATHEWS: a Avenue in Park Slope), www.nybike- Grand Marshals will be Angela and store.com. misadventure in the middle of no- jumble.com. Michael Stephan. Free. 5:30 PM. THE RUMPUS LOVES NEW YORK!: where. The kickoff event of the New OPEN STUDIO: Visit the studios of St. Athanasius Church [2154 61st St. Co-Sponsored by FlavorPill. $5 in York Clown Theater Festival. $15.00. 83 different artists at Screwball (917) 509–2803]. advance, $10 at the door. 7 pm. 5:30pm. The Brick [575 Metropoli- Spaces, the single largest par- Public Assembly [70 N. Sixth St. tliaanm Asbveu.r gat, (L7o1r8im) 9e0r7 S–t6re18e9t ]i,n w Wwilw-. tGicoipBaronot kinly tnh ee vBernoto! kFlryene M. 1u1s eamum. ’s SUN, SEPT. 9 a(7t1 W8)y 7t8h2e– A51ve8n8u], ew iwn wW.pilluiabmlicsabsusregm, - ARbSAwhsTc,oorna uiMupcltllakptseIh rtDtso,heu iftWesrr otne aah O sbtBie emroOr riBon.fic nDrogrooge k Smhoa lfyCelok.-n rllUryi fmatnLehr P aMteoiTc sbgruOtoj,ase R-Relclr:euoet Asrmba y—l ii ,ns a t nd ANSiSbiwNnsace wcIRrntVeewwetlEwoed.esRsbb ec HSWarnraAoel lCht owRSiinlktpYbiegn,a a t (CCwcl7olEes1onipts8L mha aE)[ 1ncm9lBi8dev3Ru3es 8C nA. Lc–mioToot5uyuIrm5O rrsG0ati.Nc 5iasn,]t :r,ef rd Toe Sehoetnedt., s BIKcm$HPEh5aoi olr5Teuko.O s r0SseoUe6l ou( :RWt0pth:e0 eeeS )tA st,o1 atwM5 reDt-wx. ,r a .pPw3 ta5er .PTotr- rr,isT eaop5hnns5eicpsr-cdae,e tl 7 ctNSP.5ttoa e-rPr,rew gakoe r.rYPt k o1i icna0rnn k0id.c- LIVbbC[4cE3o4alh 7yLm2s6inCAe– y.9dTh0 ct a2I.hpNc 4 LooS 8iMmpvt]r,r- e.Uewm e.S wet$I eC1iwnt0:. s b.PW -9raay:rir3tkbthh0 eS mBpslobr mobprooa.e Bnok, ldk(ay3lr ny4b-n7e.)s brown work boots, for example and lots of activities. Free. Noon–7 SALSA PARTY: Join this community —so utrhcreodu g“hG tOh”e cmounsteeustm. F’sr eoep.e 1n1- pmmai.d S Aanvteo. sb Wethwietee nG Ward. 2e1ns [tM aenrd- @. ddaannccee res vien notr sdtearr tteod h bavye lo ac qalu Barliotyo kalnydn TUES, SEPT. 11 aFwmiwft–hw7 .S gpto.m, ba.r tAo Aonvktealynrn’usa esr ttNu.o dirnigo M. (1i4d8w5o Eo.d ), HE25R24Sn3Td–O7 sR6t8Yre7 Ie]N.t sV iEnN CToOneRyY :I sClalondsi,n (g3 47) lh6ao–id1o1-db P.a RMcek.q 7sua3el9ss aFt ser avanerekn ltwin ine L lotchouemn ngeee. i $g[75h3–b91o 0r.- REAb7:oD0o0INk p,G .“m:V N.a Bgaoionomak:i C AWo Nourleft w r[e1 B6ai3do sCg froraoupmrht ySh.”te. r READING: Elizabeth Flock reads Weekend Program: This artist-led Franklin Ave. in Crown Heights, (516) between Pacifi c and Dean streets in from her book, What Happened tour of Ulrike Müller’s Raw/Cooked 850–9178], www.BrooklynSalsaParty. Cobble Hill, (718) 875–3677], www. to “My Sister: A Novel.” 7:00 p.m. exhibition will be followed by a com. bookcourt.org. BookCourt [163 Court St. between reception at the Lesbian Herstory READING: Nicola Krauss & Emma MUSIC, VIOLIN PERFORMANCE: With Pacifi c and Dean streets in Cobble Archives in Park Slope. 3:30 pm. McLaughlin read from their book violinist Jenny Scheinma, who has Hill, (718) 875–3677], www.book- Brooklyn Museum [200 Eastern “Over You.” 4:00 p.m. BookCourt collaborated with Norah Jones and court.org. Pkwy. in Prospect Heights, (718) [163 Court St. between Pacifi c and Bill Frisell. $10. 7 pm. Barbes [376 BIKE JUMBLE: The fourth annual fall 638–5000], brooklynmuseum.org. Dean streets in Cobble Hill, (718) 9th Street in Park Slope, (347) 442– bike bonanza features vendors selling PROCESSION OF MARIA SS. AD- 875–3677], www.bookcourt.org. 0248], www.barbesbrooklyn.com. used and new bikes; local clubs and DOLORATA.: The Annual Proces- READING, THE MILE END COOK- organizations and all types of bike sion of Maria SS. Addolorata is a BOOK: Noah & Rae Bernamoff See 9 DAYS on page 10 Your Neighborhood — Your News® Published weekly at Online at www.BrooklynPaper.com 1 Metrotech Center North, Suite 1001, Brooklyn NY 11201 (718) 260-2500 PUBLISHER ADVERTISING STAFF The Brooklyn Paper incorporates the following newspapers: Celia Weintrob (718) 260-4503 DISPLAY ADVERTISING SALES Brooklyn Heights Paper, Downtown News, Jay Pelc (718) 260-2570 EDITORIAL STAFF Andrew Mark (718) 260-2578 Park Slope Paper, Sunset Park Paper, Windsor Terrace Paper, Lebert McBean (718) 260-2569 EDITOR Carroll Gardens–Cobble Hill Paper, Brooklyn. Vince DiMiceli (718) 260-4508 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING SALES Michael Filippi (718) 260-4501 Fort Greene–Clinton Hill Paper, DBeEnP UMTuYe EssDigIT O(71R8) 260-4504 OLisFaF IMCaEl wMitAz N(7A18G) E2R60 -2594 Bay Ridge Paper, Bensonhurst Paper, Enhance your culture. ASoRlT PSa ErkD I(T71O8R) 260-8309 PRODUCTION STAFF Bushwick Paper, Greenpoint Paper, Williamsburg Paper Improve your bottom line. STAFF REPORTERS ART DIRECTOR Danielle Furfaro (718) 260-2511 Leah Mitch (718) 260-4510 © Copyright 2012 Courier Life, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Colin Mixson (718) 260-4514 WEB DESIGNER Unsolicited submissions become the property of Courier Life, Inc. and Natalie O’Neill (718) 260-4505 Sylvan Migdal (718) 260-4509 may be used, copied, sublicensed, adapted, transmitted, distributed, Move your business PRODUCTION ARTIST publicly performed, published, displayed or deleted as Courier Life, Inc. to DUMBO, Brooklyn. Earl Ferrer (718) 260-2528 sees fi t. Unless otherwise agreed in writing, Courier Life, Inc. will not give any compensation, credit or notice of its use of unsolicited submissions. Find out how by visiting, PUBLISHER EMERITUS Ed Weintrob TwoTreesNY.com HOW TO E-mail news and arts releases to [email protected] Listed: Two Trees Management Co, LLC CONTACT EE--mmaaiill cnaiglehntldifaer lliissttiinnggss ttoo nciaglehntldifear@@ccnnggloloccaal.lc.coomm 45 Main Street, Suite 602, DUMBO, Brooklyn, NY 11201 THE PAPER To e-mail a staff member, use first initial last name @cnglocal.com Commercial and Residential Property Management Septeber 7–13, 2012 The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 AWP 9 Laughably lousy fi lms Bad movie afi cionados discuss their favorite stinkers By Colin Mixson the ultimate flop, the one movie that to fall in love with some hunk, and DINING The Brooklyn Paper proved that, sometimes, star power which usually star in fall-themed ti- just doesn’t cut it. tles, such as “Autumn in New York,” Terrible movies don’t go to heaven He’s speaking about “Gigli,” of “Bad movies and the people and “Sweet November.” who love them” at Public As- — they end up the subject of fas- course. sembly [70 N. Sixth Street be- “It’s all, she meets a guy, she tries cination, analysis, and mostly “It’s an example of how a group tween Kent and Wythe avenues to convince him to not fall in love the butt of countless jokes. of incredibly talented people can fail in Williamsburg, (718) 384– with her, but will not say why, and 4586, publicassemblynyc.com]. iwniglT lz dhiniasetc’ asu uststhh teoh refs ol eacsnusdso cnoosfm, ttheaedl kiloa nfaetsha witnuhgro-, mparrieosnoe’frt a tebhnlayot,u ”t gaehxle p—nlta,i snmoemodn Ceetayirm, maenasnd, . g l“ouIoct’dks Sept. 19, 9 pm. Free. iitn gt“u,”Irt n’Css a otrhmuitsa, nbi nisgca risdeud.r ipbrlies et, rsohpee’ s tdhya-t Giovannini arftheunaand“ln Imtt nhoa e ocar tfh eul ucoaaimtdln l oeoyofmr r wc tatahaatsaitlectck s oh s,an niibltaty’o,fs” uu e atssx .aliaosi dttm imMno ovtahriteeet pssappneaiodArw pecnl naeid mr e ddwnpobtho iobriraelater adgd ns e toctnh hmlriianefersge a bso cl.fa”et dtese rsmrsor.niobsvl,ei es psol mointes- tibbhnuegaftTnoe ghd riaee ri lnpds. aetyhreiteinin cg1gu9 g l7aai0r rlrs em gasenoundvrr giteehe, e n—wnc hed t iihcseohed m ddoyeeu---t k—Hieeose T,ut phwhsseee i g, l czlea oite ntmpnientoe eagddru citmtaaahniasonstd r etasbh. b”eweoh oucinnrt o’dbtw atbhddee wa mFlhooloinvlpee- Photo by Stefano Carman, who co-authors the zine Carman’s patner and fellow zine time in the mid-1990s, are stories attendees enjoy free Asahi beer for It’s good to be bad: Matt Carmin and Kseniya Yarosh, authors of the zine “I “I Love Bad Movies.” author Kseniya Yarosh will focus on about women who suffer from a ter- the first half hour, and a full bar for Love Bad Movies,” discuss their romantic relationship with failed films, in a va- To that end, Carman will discuss a peculiar trope within films, rather minal illness, who try their best not the remainder of the night. riety show about the worst movies ever. BAR SCRAWL Actors on the waterfront By Bill Roundy Theater company goes on location with Red Hook barge By Elyse Wanshel The Brooklyn Paper In Brooklyn, an empty pool can be a music venue, a seemingly meaty pulled-pork sandwich can be vegan — and apparently a barge can be a theater. Theater troupe founder Laura Tesman was looking for a Brook- lyn venue where she could stage Eugene O’Neill’s “Anna Christie,” but it wasn’t until she went grocery shopping that she found the perfect place for the tense family drama about working class New York. “We really wanted to do the play, and originally we figured we’d do it along the water somewhere, but then I remembered being at Fair- way and seeing a barge out the win- dwdoiorweuc ladton brd eL ktahnueer wpa eT rreifgsemhctta lanow,c aaa Cyti oothnloa,”rta stdhaoiad-t Giovannini taGlortaeesTnntr sehsap eo Gl yuafieonllsaltue rwrat -tadhaegcor. oit sf dttw aroraitntmeh d aac Saocpblolloeaauebl tno b trThaarhrtgeoeee-r Photo by Stefano Watery stage: (Left to right) Actors Gene Gillette, Rahaleh Nassri, and John O’Creagh are walk- evokes the cutthroat world of New ing on water, in Eugene O’Neill’s “Anna Christie,” performed on a retired barge. York’s male-dominated working class in the early twentieth century by shining a light on the strength living room space that can hold an In 1985, the historic, wooden ves- but it would be really cool to see that women, such as the protago- audience of about 100 people. sel became the Waterfront Museum, the whole city vista from the tow- nist Anna Christie, had to possess “There are four eight-foot doors where impressionable youngsters er’s windows as we performed,” in order to survive. that slide open,” said Tesman. “So, al- have learned about the Big Apple she said. “The female character in this play though you’re inside of the barge, you of yesteryear. “Anna Christie” at the Water- is so forthright. She stands up for feel like you’re outside as well.” After this production, the bud- front Museum [290 Conover St. at The Counting Room [44 Berry St. at N. 11th Street, in Williamsburg, (718) herself and knows what she wants,” A century ago, the boat-turned ding company hopes to one day stage Reed Street, (718) 624–4719, wa- 599–1860, www.countingroom.com]. Open Mon–Thu, 5 pm–2 am; Fri, 5 she said. stage hauled coffee beans and “Hamlet,” inside the Williamsburgh terfrontmuseum.org/events/per- pm–4 am; Sat, noon–4 am; Sun, noon–2 am. The play will take place in the dates into the New York Harbor Savings Bank tower. formances/spleen-theatre]. Sept. interior of the barge in a central, before being abandoned in 1960. “I’m not sure if that’s possible, 8,9,15,16,21 & 23 at 7:30 pm, $18. (cid:9)(cid:34)(cid:20)(cid:30) (cid:11)(cid:39)(cid:41)(cid:19)(cid:26)(cid:32) (cid:13)(cid:20)(cid:20)(cid:27)(cid:20)(cid:30)(cid:19) (cid:11)(cid:20)(cid:34)(cid:39)(cid:20)(cid:29)(cid:16)(cid:20)(cid:36) (cid:21)(cid:22)(cid:31)(cid:18) (cid:40)(cid:45)(cid:33)(cid:40) (cid:42)(cid:42)(cid:42)(cid:35)(cid:24)(cid:32)(cid:16)(cid:36)(cid:32)(cid:32)(cid:27)(cid:28)(cid:44)(cid:30)(cid:15)(cid:36)(cid:39)(cid:35)(cid:32)(cid:36)(cid:24) (cid:1)(cid:36)(cid:39)(cid:26)(cid:37)(cid:39)(cid:37)(cid:15)(cid:17)(cid:36)(cid:32)(cid:37)(cid:37)(cid:2)(cid:36)(cid:32)(cid:32)(cid:27)(cid:28)(cid:44)(cid:30)(cid:42)(cid:26)(cid:28)(cid:28)(cid:32)(cid:34)(cid:20)(cid:30)(cid:39)(cid:25)(cid:20)(cid:26)(cid:36)(cid:37)(cid:39)(cid:41)(cid:19)(cid:26)(cid:32) (cid:19)(cid:32)(cid:32)(cid:36)(cid:37)(cid:18)(cid:37)(cid:32)(cid:39)(cid:25)(cid:15)(cid:39)(cid:17)(cid:32)(cid:29)(cid:29)(cid:41)(cid:30)(cid:26)(cid:39)(cid:44)(cid:29)(cid:20)(cid:29)(cid:16)(cid:20)(cid:36)(cid:37)(cid:17)(cid:15)(cid:30)(cid:19)(cid:20)(cid:17)(cid:26)(cid:19)(cid:20) (cid:42)(cid:25)(cid:32)(cid:42)(cid:26)(cid:28)(cid:28)(cid:16)(cid:20)(cid:23)(cid:20)(cid:15)(cid:39)(cid:41)(cid:36)(cid:20)(cid:19)(cid:26)(cid:30)(cid:15)(cid:30)(cid:20)(cid:43)(cid:25)(cid:26)(cid:16)(cid:26)(cid:39)(cid:26)(cid:32)(cid:30)(cid:15)(cid:39)(cid:39)(cid:25)(cid:20) (cid:2)(cid:36)(cid:32)(cid:32)(cid:27)(cid:28)(cid:44)(cid:30)(cid:7)(cid:41)(cid:37)(cid:20)(cid:41)(cid:29)(cid:35) (cid:11)(cid:3)(cid:3) (cid:1)(cid:10)(cid:12) (cid:4)(cid:8) (cid:2)(cid:10)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:5)(cid:6)(cid:14)(cid:8) (cid:11)(cid:34)(cid:32)(cid:30)(cid:37)(cid:32)(cid:36)(cid:20)(cid:19)(cid:16)(cid:44) (cid:7)(cid:20)(cid:19)(cid:26)(cid:15)(cid:37)(cid:34)(cid:32)(cid:30)(cid:37)(cid:32)(cid:36) 10 AWP The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 Septeber 7–13, 2012 Pampered playwright Nail salon drama is a writer’s love letter to borough $0 JOINER’S FEE THRU OCT. 8TH By Danielle Furfaro MUSIC The Brooklyn Paper GREENPOINT Y Love and friendship trump HappyFlowerNail at 99 Meserole Ave., Brooklyn the Irondale Center (85 gentrification in one (212) 912-2260 S. Oxford St. in Fort place — the nail salon. Greene) Sept. 20, 7:30 FREE PASS AT YMCANYC.ORG In her new one-woman pm; Brooklyn Conserva- OPEN HOUSE play, HappyFlowerNail, play- tory of Music (58 Seventh Ave. in Park Slope), Sept SAT. SEPT. 15, 12-4PM wright Radha Blank is hoping 21, 7:30 pm; Flatbush SPECIAL APPEARANCE BY to show the story of a space Reformed Church (890 RADIO DISNEY! where women get together to Flatbush Ave. in Ditmas EVERYONE IS WELCOME. Ask at any Y apply paint to their nails and Park), Sept 22, 7:30 pm. about the Financial Assistance program. $20 at www.beatbrook- end up finding their chosen lyn.com. family. Blank moves back and forth between the five characters, her gifts as a performer are who each embody their own staggering.” unique voice, creating a love In the 1990s, Blank wrote letter to Brooklyn. and produced her first one- “It combines a passion for woman show, “Kenya,” storytelling with a passion for about a basketball player in community,” said Blank, who conversation with her dead was one of the winners of the mother. 2011 Helen Merrill Award for In the ensuing years, she Playwriting. steered away from acting, but The accolade she has re- wrote ten ensemble plays be- ceived for her work reflects fore deciding to get back to thahneerc dnerdea rrmveelaa-stt,io owunhcshihcihinp cgsa nwpathutuirleree nr ouef-- Giovannini pfoerr“mfIo ersrmt aairnntdge .dn oaws aI’ mso rloet uprenr-- OPEN HOUSE fstsohlaerie“c d’SstS i thnBdeegopE’ ihsrnA eegaaTn l i -stSwoa hsurooetrri l lstldoedt iypetc.e i cnf“daosWliri orcaehnenca,sd”-t. Photo by Stefano i“aFnuIlo gdmBw iteloieans rntsNchk eeca w. ”oifloin tlhrln mpreeec,er”t fti oisnmargmie dws H Bdiautlhapr npinaykng-. relevant, and her abilities as Shop talk: Playwright and performer Radha Blank is behind a one-woman the Brooklyn BEAT Festival a writer are really high and show about kinship over fake nails. across the borough. Union Temple of Brooklyn 9 DAYS... GREENMARKET: Local pro- Neufville: Renee Neufville cuses on medicine. 7:00 A Reform Jewish Congregation duce; fresh baked goods of the platinum-selling duo FRI, SEPT. 14 p.m. BookCourt [163 Court and seasonal goodies, WIC Zhané performs. 7 pm. READING, A NIGHT IN St. between Pacifi c and and Senior FMNP coupons Brooklyn Museum [200 TRANSLATION: Archipel- Dean streets in Cobble Sund9a:y3, 0Saemp tteom 1b:e0r0 9p,m 2012 ConWtinuEeDd, frSoEmP pTa. g1e2 8 ap(W1cm5ect.esh tBp Siatnter. tdP aer.nl o-FdPsr prePietercoc. ht8s ap Pareadmcr kCt– )P3i,r aclrek EUGEHbareEosiNgotehkErlt nyMs n,P mI(kR7w1uM8syeA). 6uiNn3m 8PC.or–Oo5rgsM0p.0 Ee0cD],tY aw7C:goo0our0k’r sp t t T.hSmreta..y n b Bsheloaatovtwoeke rCtsero anruen Prastadl a[c1 tfi6efir o3cdm . BIRHbDoilSlo, Ok(7cF1o 8uP)r R8t.E7o5Yrg:– 3L. e6a7r7n], awbwouwt. READING: At this book www.prospectpark.org. FESTIVAL: Join Eugene and Dean streets in Cobble eagles, hawks, owls, and launch event, Kathleen MEMORY ARTS CAFE: For Mirman, Todd Barry, Jon Hill, (718) 875–3677], www. falcons from the rangers. Alcott discusses her novel families and caregivers of Glaser, and John Mu- bookcourt.org. Free. 10 am to noon. Owl’s “The Dangers of Proximal Alzheimer’s patients. Free. laney — plus some spe- BACK TO SCHOOL PARTY Head Park [68th St. and (cid:85)(cid:202)(cid:19)(cid:213)(cid:152)(cid:202)(cid:62)(cid:86)(cid:204)(cid:136)(cid:219)(cid:136)(cid:204)(cid:136)(cid:105)(cid:195)(cid:202)(cid:118)(cid:156)(cid:192)(cid:202)(cid:142)(cid:136)(cid:96)(cid:195) Alphabets” with fellow 6 pm. New York Memory cial guests— for the fi fth FOR MOMS WITH BUST Colonial Road in Bay Ridge, (cid:85)(cid:202)(cid:29)(cid:105)(cid:62)(cid:192)(cid:152)(cid:202)(cid:62)(cid:76)(cid:156)(cid:213)(cid:204)(cid:202)(cid:156)(cid:213)(cid:192)(cid:202)(cid:42)(cid:192)(cid:105)(cid:195)(cid:86)(cid:133)(cid:156)(cid:156)(cid:143)(cid:202)(cid:62)(cid:152)(cid:96)(cid:202)(cid:44)(cid:105)(cid:143)(cid:136)(cid:125)(cid:136)(cid:156)(cid:213)(cid:195)(cid:202)(cid:45)(cid:86)(cid:133)(cid:156)(cid:156)(cid:143) a7Bb:ueo3tto0hwk opesr.te moJnor. e ShG .n[ 6rE eW8lel6irno aFltiyutg. l Phtforltae nce eS. t. CFSwolewounpwrtete.ha,r ( lAz[71p1v1o8e9)en 14tu4r9eyt9 h.ic–n oS7 Ptm7.a 0a.r 1tk] , aCpennmontmh.u B eaSeldt .lEyl au HFtg oeTesuhntsiierevd a M[ 1lA.4 iFrv9mer eSnaeeun.ve 8- i n MLae vAsAeiNtnGtDienAr:g ZaL oIneNdfa Ecv joeo A citnTkh tueBas Aik lfsiBod arEs n a-wdni th GA(cL7gL1oE8vR) p4Ya2 rT1kO–s2.Uo0Rr2g:1 .]“ ,S whwe wW.naylk-s (cid:85)(cid:202)(cid:22)(cid:152)(cid:195)(cid:136)(cid:96)(cid:105)(cid:192)(cid:189)(cid:195)(cid:202)(cid:204)(cid:156)(cid:213)(cid:192)(cid:202)(cid:156)(cid:118)(cid:202)(cid:156)(cid:213)(cid:192)(cid:202)(cid:133)(cid:136)(cid:195)(cid:204)(cid:156)(cid:192)(cid:136)(cid:86)(cid:62)(cid:143)(cid:202)(cid:76)(cid:213)(cid:136)(cid:143)(cid:96)(cid:136)(cid:152)(cid:125) and S. Portland Avenue MUSIC, DEAD PREZ: Per- Gowanus, (718) 643–6510], giveaways. Free. 7 pm. in Beauty: The Feminine (cid:85)(cid:202)(cid:42)(cid:143)(cid:213)(cid:195)(cid:202)(cid:105)(cid:152)(cid:204)(cid:105)(cid:192)(cid:202)(cid:204)(cid:156)(cid:202)(cid:220)(cid:136)(cid:152)(cid:202)(cid:62)(cid:202)(cid:19)(cid:44)U(cid:13)(cid:13)n(cid:202)(cid:222)i(cid:105)o(cid:62)(cid:192)(cid:202)n(cid:156)(cid:118) (cid:202)(cid:147)T(cid:105)e(cid:147)(cid:76)m(cid:105)(cid:192)(cid:195)p(cid:133)(cid:136)(cid:171)l(cid:116)e REAi2bflBbnyr4oeooDn F6toom:I wo–NkkP r0esC“oGtt2Ae eooG:0n m urND0 rerPes]i.t.,ga .ce ”N[gco1hn i7u6rtmefie : r3,i0ck. ne (0Csa 7nB en1lopir 8dgru.ome) hro Datt.k - deS-ast .n fSE$PSi7no82iocu xrWl20blmitop– hlamiii5s clntSle1 i ogaAtt 8h.&nm s8wae,.s] s t ai,e$d tb Wwnmh1oud6 wLoryb giuDtrlwn.yh,s J .8e(ha[ps77: dl 3Aui10Tfv08ebo vaN ),eltp niIac.nrmc laou es.ne, - RAWwphivmniaeswdu nunEeswdadiNpcl-.e t,esSa hnehnrEetltad eM,bai ercfire Bntt&llmsslLth mEaoc,o nr:frau eagdAksasa eenhstnip nuiviionzypoena.d tcsa,tl eo iiirgon-mth-n .t s MUBbamcmtShoveaooIeemCbt mdnwae,.eu eslInareSpenensLaniw dAsir nFt t (Na y4ipPfnb6Dtoadhu2rpS sk pa :Bt b noS.Aeeadlwrcovn gceeFpdelnlrae anfgti)utmb, ibS lv retuei,tdss eh . IMtbipEndoameseuusata.srtau eelBel tliurarxynnom tp i AiodPol oGkneknrlcwa yuiEnilneiysgdg .nsM ye itfenp eulEe etmPs gnaRre iyodineunpssibm ntp tao”he e :[rfe 2cnAr 0et. 0e2 streets in Cobble Hill, semblynyc.com. istry, photography, models emotional performance. Heights, (718) 638–5000], (718) 875–3677], www. and performing art. 8 pm. $15–$18. 8 pm. Littlefi eld brooklynmuseum.org. 17 Eastern Parkway bookcourt.org. THURS, SEPT. 13 Littlefi eld [622 Degraw St. [622 Degraw St. between LECTURE: “Joan Mitchell, MAGAZINE LAUNCH between Fourth and Fifth Fourth and Fifth avenues in Lady Painter”: Writer and Brooklyn, NY 11238 PARTY: Slice Magazine READING: Hampton Fancher avenues in Gowanus, (718) Gowanus, (718) 855–3388], art historian Patricia Albers kicks launches Issue 11 reads from “The Shape 855–3388], www.little- www.littlefi eldnyc.com. will present an illustrated 718-638-3649 wneityh M reaaudmin, gCsh biny- SCuonu rLte-e, oOft thheer FSitnoarli eDso.”g 7 a:0n0d p .m. STAfi NelDdn-UycP.c CoOmM. EDY: Every SAT, SEPT. 15 lseiocntuisrte a ornti sAt bJostarna cMt Eitxchperells. - Heidi Diehl, Janice Obu- BookCourt [163 Court St. second Thursday at 68 Jay www.uniontemple.org chowski, and Robin Beth between Pacifi c and Dean St Bar in DUMBO. Free. READING, GRAND 2 pm. Brooklyn Museum Schaer. Free. 7. Power- streets in Cobble Hill, (718) 8:30pm. 68 Jay St. Bar [68 ROUNDS: Chris Adrian [200 Eastern Pkwy. in [email protected] House Arena [37 Main St. 875–3677], www.book- Jay St. in Dumbo, (718) reads selections from the Prospect Heights, (718) (718) 666–3049], www. court.org. 260–8207], www.facebook. literary magazine Granta, 638–5000], brooklynmu- powerhousearena.com. BROOKLYNITES JAZZ: Renee com/dumbocomedy. whose newest issue fo- seum.org. invites our community to meet our new Rabbi and join us in prayer on Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. TICKETS ARE FREE. Make our home your new spiritual home. Please call FJC office at (718) 871-5200. 327 East 5th Street (Corner of East 5th and Church Avenue) Brooklyn, NY 11218 Bedford Stuyvesant Restoration